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Transcript
December 2012
Direct-to-Fabric
wide-format Inkjet Printing
ATPColor DFP Series
Nicholas Hellmuth and María Renée Ayau
ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
Contents
Introduction1
The in-person study of the actual printers
2
The Basics
3
Purchasing6
Set-up of the printer
7
Installation of the Printer
9
Installation: Instructions and Manuals
9
Installation of the Printer: Training
10
Tech Support and Warranty
11
Construction: Aesthetics
12
Construction: Build Quality
13
Features: Media: Heaters
15
Media Transport Mechanism
15
Media Roll and Media Feeding
16
Please Note
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pirated copy.
Also, since this report is frequently updated, if
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may be an obsolete edition. FLAAR reports are
being updated all year long, and our comment on
that product may have been revised positively or
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form end users.
To obtain a legitimate copy, which you know is the
complete report with nothing erased or changed,
and hence a report with all the original description
of pros and cons, please obtain your original
and full report straight from www.large-formatprinters.org.
Your only assurance that you have a complete and
authentic evaluation which describes all aspects of
the product under consideration, benefits as well
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from FLAAR, via www.wide-format-printers.NET.
© Copyright FLAAR Reports 2012
Operating the Printer
18
Safety and Health Considerations
21
Printhead Technology
23
Printhead DPI and Features
23
Printhead Life Expectancy
25
Printhead Positioning
26
Printhead Carriage
26
Cleaning and Maintenance
27
Cleaning and Maintenance: Waste
30
Printer Drivers and Software
31
RIP Software Features
31
Ink32
Ink: Cost
34
Ink: Longevity
34
Ink: Color Gamut
35
Media Size
37
Media: What Materials?
39
Media Issues
41
Image Quality Issues
41
Fixation Unit: Calendering System
42
Applications42
Productivity and ROI (Return of Investment)
43
History and Relationships of the Manufacturer
43
Comparisons with other Printers
44
Advertising Claims
45
General Considerations
45
Comments:46
Pros in general:
46
Pros for the printer portion
47
Pros for the heat fixation (sublimation) unit
48
Downsides48
Discussion Points
48
Reality check
49
The final statement is on color saturation.
49
Appendix A, Site-Visit Case Study
50
Appendix B, Using Print Samples from ATPColor 53
II
ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing,
Wide-Format Printer for Textiles
Buyer’s Guide in FAQs Format:
Questions to Ask
During an Evaluation of a Textile
and Dye Sublimation Printer
Nicholas Hellmuth assisted by Maria Renée Ayau
Copyright ©2012
Ask the following questions before you buy any inkjet printer:
Introduction
This FLAAR Report is based on having seen textile printers from ATPColor at printer trade shows around the
world for the past several years. During the last four years there has clearly been a rise of interest in textile
printers:
• More signage expos are including more textile printers
• Textile trade shows, most notably ITMA, are including more inkjet textile printers
• More manufacturers are offering textile printers
• More ink companies are offering textile inks
• And more printshops are asking which of all these printers and inks should they consider.
I have been studying textile printers since the days of Encad. I can still remember the expos a decade ago
when Stork, DigiFab, and other brands. I can still remember the textile printers of ColorSpan in USA and
Compedo in Europe.
I have witnessed the rise and unfortunate termination of the nice Yuhan-Kimberly textile printer program
and of course neither Encad nor ColorSpan survived. I have not seen Compedo textile printers for years and
there was actually a period of many years when Stork had zero textile printers at signage expos (they are
now rebranding other models). In distinction, ATPColor has developed and grown during these same years.
So the following evaluation of current textile printer technology is based on ten years awareness of wideformat inkjet textile printers. The review in this PDF is dedicated to looking at one specific printer solution.
There are scores of textile printer applications; there are four kinds of textile inks. The report here is focused
exclusively on direct-to-fabric with disperse dye inks. And the grand format printer discussed here is dedicated to soft signage and flags. Yes, you can print curtains and dozens of other applications if you wish, but
the ATPColor DFP Series is focused on producing colorful signage, banners, and flags.
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ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
2
The in-person study of the actual printers
Nicholas Hellmuth and Sofia Monzon spent two days in Milano, Italy, after Photokina digital camera equipment expo in Cologne. Their There were four DFP series printers in the facilities:
At the left the newest model, DFP 1320 12G4, with 12 ink channels. The earlier models have eight ink channels.
At the front left of the demo room is one DFP 740 8G4; at the right is another.
The intermediate-sized model, DFP 1000 is logically the same as the others other than the width. There was
also a fourth model in the manufacturing hall. However I spent most of my research time on the 3.2 meter
12-ink channel.
One of many things which appealed to me about the opportunity to evaluate this printer was the statistic
that most of the end-users (the printshops who buy this printer) this is the first grand format printer they
have utilized. I like this fact because of the people who read the FLAAR Reports, many of them have never
used a grand format textile printer are also looking at textile printers. Other readers perhaps already have
a textile printer but are looking for a better one, and especially for a system which will produce color with
more pop.
Dr. Nicholas Hellmuth and Roberto Martellono at ATPColor headquarters.
ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
The Basics
1.
Brand name, model?
ATPColor DFP series. The primary model
2.
What is the nature of the company behind the brand name? Is this company the manufacturer, distributor, or rebranding?
ATPColor is the actual manufacturer of the complete sublimation units for their DFP RSeries. This consists
of a Roland printer on top and an ATPColor system for handling the fabric. There will be a separate FLAAR
evaluation of the RSeries printers, since they are a totally separate physical system from the grand format.
The grand format printer chassis is contract manufactured in Asia with the textile handling aspects and
especially the sublimation technology based on the acquired knowledge of ATPColor developed in Italy by
their manufacturing experience with textile printer sublimation and fabric feeding systems over the years.
Since ATPColor has designed the textile and sublimation procedures, it is the sole brand name for these
units especially since many of the key features come from ATPColor in Italy.
We have a site-visit case study of this grand format printer scheduled for Munich, Germany, to document
the reliability and effectiveness of the sublimation chemistry and the fabric transport system of ATPColor.
3.
Does the machine manufacturer also manufacture inks for textiles?
No, there are dozens of good ink manufacturers already (not many of whom try to build printers)
ATPColor DFP 1.9 meter printer model.
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ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
ATPColor DFP 3.3 meter printer model.
4.
Does the machine manufacturer also make textiles to print on with this machine?
No, there are scores of manufacturers of media. I am not familiar with any who try to build printers. It really is best to focus and concentrate on doing one thing well: ATPColor focuses on designing textile printers and sublimation systems.
5.
What other printers are the same or similar chassis from this manufacturer or distributor?
ATPColor DFP1320 (3.3 meters),
DFP1000 (2.6 meters),
DFP740 (1.9 meters).
6.
What other printers are the same or similar chassis?
Some printers have an enclosed chassis like the ATPColor DFP printer, they don’t look exactly the same but
are similar: D.G.I. FabriJet Pro I (Nassenger Pro 60), JHF Chromo I, and SkyJet1800.
7.
If there are two or three (or more) widths of this printer, what differences exist other than the width?
The only difference in this series of ATPColor printers is the width. Older models have an earlier printhead;
current models have an even better printhead.
8.
When and where was this model first introduced?
The model with Gen(eration)3 printheads from Ricoh was launched at FESPA Digital Amsterdam, 2009.
The model with Ricoh Gen4 heads was launched at the end of that same year 2009.
9.
Is this printer mature technology or still in alpha-stage or beta-stage?
I would consider this a second-generation for the grand-format size.
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ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
10. How does this model compare with comparable previous printers?
You now have additional options, general improvements, and a Gen4 printhead instead of Gen3 printhead.
11.
List price?
Wide-format models are in the 74,000 Euro price range. Grand-format models are in the 170,000 Euro price
range.
12. What accessories are extra charge? Are these same or similar accessories included with other printers
at no extra cost?
The additional accessories are the
• inline cutting system
• jumbo roll for unwinding and rewinding.
• Ergo-Soft RIP
• Caldera RIP
• Colorgate
13. What other costs are involved?
Realize that the air filtration system can’t use “active carbon.” Obviously when you acquire this effective
system you will be told what kind of material to utilize.
14. Does a complete set of full-sized ink cartridges come with the new printer, or merely a “starter set”
that is not as full as a regular set?
You receive two liters per color. I would assess this as a bit more than a starter set.
15. What other equipment is needed to operate this printer? For example, does this printer include its own
power line conditioner? Do you need an uninterruptible power supply (UPS)?
If your country (like ours, Guatemala) has electricity that is constantly knocked out by monsoon rain
storms or severe lightning or earthquakes or volcanic eruptions, you might consider an industrial strength
power line conditioner and possibly an Uninterruptible Power Supply (the latter not to run the printer but
to be able to turn it off properly if the main power supply in your city is zapped).
Otherwise, in most countries, if your local power is acceptable, you do not need to have special electrical
equipment.
16. Do you need to supply a compressed air source?
No compressed air source is required for this printer.
17. Do you need a coating machine, steamer, washer, calendering machine?
No, the calender is embedded, so you can fix the color without using a separate calendering machine. This
saves cost, and space, and labor (salary).
18. Is it recommended, or required, to buy a spare parts kit? Or extra printheads?
Does the end-user buy the spare parts kit? Or is this held by the distributor?
Most end-users don’t wish to buy a spare parts kit up front, in part because they don’t yet have the experience to do their own repairs when they are first buying this printer.
There is a “Survival Kit” available but usually this is stocked by the distributor.
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ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
Purchasing
19. Where are demo centers located?
The primary demo center is outside Milano, Italy.
20. What is the procedure to visit a demo center?
Potential customers are welcome to visit the demo center. It is in a nice area of Italy. Simply meet one of
the distributors or the ATPColor Managing Director, Roberto, at a trade show, or send them an e-mail,
explaining who you are, your background in the world of wide-format inkjet printers, and the applications
you are looking at.
21. Are end-users welcome to visit the factory and the main headquarters demo center?
Yes the company is hospitable and potential distributors and potential end-users are welcome to visit.
22. Are the dealers a national (most companies) or regional (Roland allows a dealer within USA to operate only within a limited regional area)? Do I have any choice in dealers? (with some printers, choosing
a dealer is as important as the choice of printer brand; end users repeatedly suggest that choosing a
dealer is crucial to the success, or failure, of some brands of printers).
• Distributors are national or regional
• Germany
• Sweden
• Norway
• UK
• USA
• Turkey
• And obviously Italy.
23. What kinds of leasing or other financing
are available?
You should obtain leasing from your own
financial institution if you need financing.
ATPColor headquarters in Milano, Italy.
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ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
Set-up of the printer: practical considerations
24. What is the delivery time, between the time I order the printer and it is delivered?
4 weeks is normal time.
25. What are the electrical requirements of this printer?
The electrical requirements for this printer are 380-400V, 32 Amps, 3 phase.
26. Are there any special temperature or humidity requirements or preferences of this printing system?
Temperature and humidity are indeed crucial, especially humidity. Even more important is that whatever
temperature and humidity is present in the work area, that it not vary during the day: cool in morning, hot
by 11 am. Hotter by 2 pm.
While printer is on: Temperature 18 to 25 C (64 to 77 F), relative humidity 40 to 60% (no condensation).
While printer is off: Temperature 15 to 35 C (59 to 95 F), relative humidity 20 to 80% (no condensation).
The printer itself has its own filtration system. But for any grand-format printer, I would personally suggest a room ambient temperature and humidity control system plus an air exhaust or filtration system.
27. What is the connectivity? Network, SCSI, FireWire, USB, Ethernet, or other?
USB
28. Realistically, how much surrounding and support space will the equipment need in addition to the machine’s own footprint.
Besides the machine’s own footprint, an extra 1.5 meters all around the machine is required. And an extra
space of the same width of the machine is required to install the lamp.
29. What is the size and weight of the printer?
The approximate weight of this printer is 1500 kg.
ATPColor DFP printer assembly.
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ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
30. Does the printer come in one piece? Does this mean you have to remove a wall to get the printer this
size into your office?
The printer comes in one piece in one box. A second box has anything else that is needed. Whether your
building entrance allows this printer to enter is probable. You would need a restricted entrance to require
a breaking through a wall (many large UV-cured printers do actually require breaking down the wall).
31. How many boxes arrive?
You can normally expect that two crates will arrive. One has the assembled printer inside. The other box
has everything else which is needed.
32. What is setup of the printer like?
At least two days is needed.
33. Realistically, what expenses must you incur for the installation, such as a fork-lift truck or crane to lift
the printer off the truck?
You will need a heavy-duty fork-lift truck, to lift two and a half tons.
ATPColor DFP printer assembly.
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ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
Installation of the Printer
34. Can you handle the shipping crate with your team, or is a fork-lift required?
You need a fork-lift truck.
35. Does the printer come in one piece? Is the printer already put together?
Yes, already assembled.
36. Between the day the printer arrives, how soon is it realistic to achieve full productivity?
This time will depend on how much experience you have with printing with disperse dye ink on polyester.
If this is your first machine, two weeks would be expected to acquire full productivity.
Installation of the Printer: Instructions and Manuals
37. How many manuals are available?
Main manual and an electrics schematic manual.
38. Is there a Site Preparation Guide? If so, is it helpful?
Yes, there is a site preparation guide.
39. How difficult is it to obtain the manuals BEFORE
you buy the printer?
If you have an appropriate interest, you can look at
the manuals up front.
40. What is the native language of these guides? Is the
translation acceptable?
The native language of the manuals is Italian and the
translation is good and easy to understand.
41. Does the user’s manual have a glossary?
Most user’s guides lack a glossary.
42. Is there a Service Guide?
Yes.
43. Is the Service Guide available to the end-user, or
only to the service tech engineer?
When I visit printshops around the world, some operators have a service manual and others prefer to
let the service tech engineer from the distributor or
manufacturer take care of this level of service.
ATPColor DFP printer manual.
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ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
Installation of the Printer: Training
44. Is training included in the purchase price? If so, what kind of training is offered?
Training price, or inclusion, depends on your local distributor.
45. Is training necessary? Is classroom training available?
Training is individual; not in a classroom.
46. Is factory training available?
Factory training is rare, though some companies do welcome factory visits, and a few companies do indeed offer training at the factory. And yes, training at the factory outside Milano is available.
47. What on-line training is available?
No on-line training; though obviously you can ask questions on-line.
48. What about follow-up training after you have had the printer a month and know enough to ask better
questions?
At FLAAR our suggestion is to get original training during installation and then make a list of your questions and after the first month get more advanced training. Yes, this follow-up training is available.
While the printer is being installed it is recommended
that people make a list of questions, for an advanced
training session.
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ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
Tech Support and Warranty
49. What is the original warranty period?
12 months warranty for the printer.
36 months warranty for the calendering system.
50. Does it include parts, labor, printheads?
Almost all warranty of printheads, any brand, and any printer, are based on what caused the issue with
the printheads. If the printhead is at fault; it is normally replaced. If the printhead was damaged by a head
strike or lack of cleaning, the manufacturer will tend not to replace it.
51. What sort of technical assistance do you actually offer? We mean serious technical assistance. Do your
tech support people who answer the phone read from a script and only get a real technician later on?
Most manufacturers are cutting back on tech support and/or have people answering the phones who
do not themselves actually use or know the equipment first-hand. They just attempt to read from a
script.
This depends on the dealer.
52. Can the manufacturer remotely diagnose the printer?
The manufacturer can access the print log file.
53. Do the tech support people understand fabrics and textiles?
Yes.
54. What is the native language of the tech support person?
Italian, Spanish and English out of the factory.
55. What tech support is available and for how long? What is the wait time on the phone…truthfully?
Depends on the day and hour (and who the dealer is).
56. Can you provide an extended hardware warranty?
This can be discussed.
57. Who provides the service? The dealer or the manufacturer?
First level would be the dealer. Second level would be directly with the manufacturer.
58. Do spare parts come from a foreign country? If so, what is the wait time for such parts?
Some spare parts would come from Europe; other parts from Asia. From our experience there is wait time
even for parts for printers from Fortune 500 companies.
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ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
12
Construction: Aesthetics
59. How can you describe the design of the printer?
The printer is a working machine. So it is not designed to look like a pinball machine. Also it is not
painted garish colors: instead it is a nice neutral color
(so it does not conflict with your company décor).
60. Can you easily tell which is the “front” and which is
the “back”?
I call the front the area where the LCD and operator
panel(s) are situated. This usually means that the
other side is where you feed the material in. I call
that the back. But many printer companies call the
feeding area the front. It makes no difference as long
as you define what you mean in advance.
Some textile printers have a moveable control computer that can be situated at one end, or at the feeding area (whichever location the operator prefers).
But the standard arrangement is that the LCD and
keyboard are on the output side. I call this the front.
VIew of the back side of ATPColor DFP Series printer.
Frontal view of the ATPColor DFP printer.
ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
Construction: Build Quality
61. What is the solid-ness of the construction of the outer body? Is it plastic? Metal? Heavy gauge?
The printer is made out of heavy steel; it looks very sturdy and solid.
62. Is there a front hood and also a back hood?
There is only a front hood, no back hood is needed on this printer. The front has three separate hoods,
which helps reduce the weight-per-hood.
63. Does the front hood lift up high enough to allow full access?
Yes, the front hood lifts high enough for a technician to access the interior of the printer. You will unlikely
bump your head while working on this printer (unless you crawl up inside the printer, or do gymnastics).
Plus the lift-up system looks acceptable (you do not want to have the hood come crashing down on your
head, or on your backbone). But obviously this depends on how you handle the raising and lowering of the
hood. If properly installed it should hold up the hood unless it gets damaged or you have bad luck.
The air struts to raise the hoods are from Starbulus (so not some low-bid
miscellaneous locally made system).
64. The front hood, is it strong, or cheap plastic?
The front hood is of adequate strength as it is made out of heavy
gauge metal just like the rest of the printer. The best example of
a really cheap plastic component is the flap over the ink; and a
flap on the lower back on the new SureColor series from Epson.
Many people in the industry are surprised that a wobbly thin
plastic component like this would be visible.
65. What is the solid-ness of the inner parts? Plastic, metal?
The parts on the inside of the printer are made of metal and
look as sturdy and firm as the rest of the printer.
Close-up of the units from Starbulus,
that raise the hoods
ATPColor DFP printer hood.
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ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
66. Does the printer wobble back and forth when printing?
No, the printer does not wobble while printing, The construction of the printer is sturdy, thus the printer
remains steady while printing.
67. How many wheels? On printer? How many on fixation unit?
The printer has eight wheels in total. Even though the heating unit is embedded to the printer, the wheels
are divided in two groups: four for the printer itself and four for the heating unit, which it is worth mentioning, does not move independently and the wheels are placed there for leveling purposes.
68. Is there an Igus (e-chain cable carrier system)?
The energy chain is the plastic linked system that
holds all the cables and ink tubing so that it does
not get rubbed while being moved back and
forth to feed the carriage. Most mid-range
and almost all high-end UV printers have
an energy chain from the company Igus. As
expected for ATPColor, they also selected
an IGUS brand chain.
Igus energy chain close-up.
Printer carriage pulled by the Igus chain.
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ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
Features: Media: Heaters
69. How many heaters are used?
Only one heater is used: the calender.
70. What is the purpose of the heater(s)? To dry the ink, or to fix the ink?
The purpose of the heater (calender) is to fix the color onto the fabric.
71. Are the heaters before printing, during printing or after printing?
The heater (calender) is used after printing.
72. If there is more than one heater, can they be operated independently?
No, there is only one heater.
73. Do you need to buy a separate additional heater?
No, you don’t need to buy a separate heater. The one on the printer is enough to fix the colors on the textiles.
Structure of the Printer: Media Transport Mechanism
74. Was this printer made originally as a textile ink printer, or is it retrofitted for textiles? If retrofitted,
what was the original brand or model?
The chassis of a printer is a basic structure. The rest of the printer was designed to handle textiles.
75. Is there a moving transport belt or a stationary platen?
The printer has a stationary platen, No transport belt.
76. Describe the platen.
A textile printer usually needs a trough. For this printer the trough is cleverly outfitted with a trough.
77. Are their edge guards at each side (end) of the platen? At left, or at right, or both?
Yes, edge guards are available but normally are not needed.
78. Can you move the left guard, or the right guard, or both?
Yes, you can move either or both.
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ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
Media Roll and Media Feeding
79. How is roll media fed? Pinch roller against grit roller?
Entry-level and mid-range systems use a row of pinch rollers working against a row of grit rollers. High-end
systems use tension. The ATPColor printer uses tension.
80. How many drive rollers are there?
There are four driver rollers: two at the front and two at the back of the printer.
81. How is the roll held at the feeding position? On a spindle? On a saddle?
The media roll is held at feeding position by a spindle.
82. How is the roll media handled at feeding position? For example, is there a dancer bar?
At feeding position, there is a dancer bar to handle the roll media feeding system.
83. At the back, is there an extra roller bar(s) near the platen or transport belt? Is it a bar to roll under the
media, or over the media, or are there both (in addition to pinch roller/grit roller arrangement).
On the back of the printer there is a foot feeding pedal to load the media as a single person without the
need to jump front & back of the printer. Facing the back of the printer, ink access is at the left; vacuum
pipes are at the right.
Pinch and grit roller view.
Zoom in of the grit rollers.
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ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
84. At the front, is there an extra roller bar(s) near the platen or transport belt? Is it a bar to roll under the
media, or over the media, or are there both (in addition to pinch roller/grit roller arrangement).
At the front of the printer, there are two bars near the transport belt: one that goes over and one that
goes under the media.
85. Describe the overall path of the media through the system?
A simple path is neither a major benefit nor a defect. A simple path means that it’s easier to load and there
is less to go wrong. A more sophisticated system may have advantages for feeding some kinds of media.
86. Is the take-up spindle an air-core?
No air-core is needed; uses an “easy block” instead.
87. Does material roll up evenly on the take-up reel?
I was frankly surprised to see a printer roll up the media as evenly as this printer does. There was no skew. I
have seen quarter-million dollar printers do terrible jobs handling 3.2 meter wide material evenly. And yes,
I am aware that the quality of the media itself affects this. But the fact that this printer does practically a
flawless job was one of several hints that is is definitely not an average printer.
88. Is there a quick-unwinding function (to get the media off the roll)?
Yes, ATPColor offers this extra feature (not always found on other printers).
Media path for the DFP Series printers.
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ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
Operating the Printer
89. Can you manage print jobs via the Internet with your printer?
No.
90. Which materials are pre-established in the software, or do you have to create the settings for each
class of material yourself?
Media for display (signage) and media for flags are the two main different kinds of media you would tend
to handle with this system.
91. In the main area for operation, is the machine software based (touch screen), or with physical control
buttons? Or Both?
The printer is software based (touch screen) and also has minimalistic physical control buttons.on a tiny
touch screen. The touch screen is very small since most controls would be handled through firmware or
RIP on your computer monitor.
Main area for operation: emergency stop button, control panel and buttons.
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ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
92. Can you operate this printer from your iPad?
Operating a printer with your iPad started about 18 months ago, and now several brands offer this feature.
But this printer is still operated by your normal desktop computer.
93. How many operators or operator assistants does this printer require?
One operator normally. Two if you have to lift a really large heavy roll of media on or off.
94. What can you control as operator?
• ON/OFF line
• Feed calibration
• Total or partial meter counter
• Calender temperature
• Forward/backward buttons
• Set-up screen:
• Supply
• Take-up
• Fault setup
• Calender
• Advance after print
• No heat if no advance
• Security code
• Quick unwinding
• Stop/sub
• Status screen:
95. What is the level of ease of use? Can anyone use this printer or do they have to be
trained and certified?
You do not want an untrained individual
to attempt to operate this machine. For
a printer of this size and sophistication it
is essential that the operator be trained.
Previous experience with RIP software
and grand-format printers (solvent or UVbased) is also a help, though of course a
textile printer has many unique features.
96. Where does the operator stand or sit?
The operator sits at the RIP station (computer) and otherwise stands at the front of
the printer.
ATPColor printer operator standing in front of the printer.
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Input
Foot switch
Supply down
Supply up
Take-up down
Take-up up
Fault drive1
Fault drive2
Fuse supply
Fuse take-up
Output
Enable calender
Clockwise supply
Counter clockwise supply
Clockwise take-up
Counter clockwise take-up
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ATPColor DFP Series
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97. What aspects of the printer can you operate from behind (the loading area)?
The only thing you can operate from the back is loading the media.
98. What controls are at the back of the printer?
There are no controls on the outside back of the printer. Facing the back of the printer, ink access is at the
left; vacuum pipes are at the right.
99. What controls are at either end of the printer?
Air extraction switches are at the left end. The air unit is adjacent. At the side, right, are two fans and an
Off/On switch.
ON/OFF switch.
Air unit control buttons.
Air unit and corresponding control buttons at the left of the printer.
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ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
Safety and Health Considerations
100. How many emergency stop buttons are there, and where are they located?
The printer has two emergency stop buttons located on each end of the printer
(on the front).
101. Is there auto-shut down? If so, what triggers it?
No auto-shut down. However the calender will turn off if the printer senses it is overheating.
102. How much odor is emitted by the ink or heat sublimation process? How much subsequent outgassing
is there, and for how long does the stuff smell?
All sublimation processes result in a cloud of “smoke.” This is why the exhaust system is absolutely essential. This extraction of the sublimation smog is taken care of by the exhaust filtration system which sits
adjacent to the printer. The residual odor is normal for what is expected.
103. Is the machine enclosed, or exposed?
The printer carriage and entire printing path is completely enclosed
104. What system of ventilation or exhaust system is built into the printer? Or if not required, what would
common sense dictate? Is it adequate to clear the work area of gasses and fumes?
The printer comes with a fume box that is connected directly to the printer, so it sucks all the gases and
fumes produced during sublimation. Though it is also recommended that you install the printer on a ventilated area, since the ink odor may cause physical distress.
There are three manifolds in the air cleaner system, so you can decide yourself how many to turn on.
Views from the front (left) and back (right) of the printer’s air cleaning system.
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ATPColor DFP Series
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105. What is the noise level, primarily of the fans for the vacuum?
The fan sounds like you would expect of an industrial fan. Otherwise I did not notice any significant noise
made by this printer.
106. Do the printer specs list the noise level?
No, it does not list the noise level. In most printers noise comes from vacuum pumps, which are more common in solvent and UV-cured printers..
107. What moving parts might hit a person if they are standing near the printer?
None of the parts should hit the person standing nearby, because the printer is enclosed.
108. Is the Operator Manual so poorly translated that you might make a mistake; a mistake that could be
damaging to your health, or otherwise dangerous for your printshop?
No, the manual is translated accurately. This is a huge asset over manuals even from respected Japanese
manufacturers. The manuals of one otherwise good brand are poorly done and are rarely in acceptable
idiomatic English.
109. How easy is it to obtain the MSDS of the ink?
It is rare that the MSDS of the ink is easy to obtain. If the MSDS is an auto-download from the company
website, this is how it should be. But most companies do not wish the end user to know which brand of
ink is being used, so hiding the MSDS is not necessarily an attempt to hide the dangers, but may be to hide
the source of the ink.
The ink recommended by ATPColor has an MSDS sheet available and also fulfills the requirements of REACH.
Ink containers inside of the printer.
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ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
Printhead Technology
110. What is the brand of the printhead, and model?
Ricoh G4 (generation four)
111. Is the brand and model of printhead clearly identified in the published specifications?
No. The published specifications do not list the printhead brand or model, but the brand and model of
printhead are openly discussed.
112. What other printers use the identical printheads or a model very similar?
• d-gen Teleios GT Grande (Ricoh Gen 4L with a fixed drop size at 15 or 27 picoliters)
• Mimaki TextileJet Tx400-1800D,
• and Mimaki TextileJet Tx400-1800B
Printhead DPI and Features
113. How many printheads are used?
The original model of this printer uses eight printheads. The current model has twelve printheads.
114. How many nozzles per printhead?
The printhead specifications read the Gen3 model has 192 nozzles per head (x2). The Gen4 head also has
384 nozzles per head.
115. How many printheads per color?
Two printheads per color in the original; for more speed on the 3.2 meter model, three printheads per
color.
116. Can your printhead technology achieve a solid black black?
Yes, the printers from ATPColor can achieve a nice solid black color.
117. What is the drop size in picoliters?
The drop size in picoliters is 7 to 25.
118. Is there variable droplet size capability?
Yes, 7 picoliters on up in size.
119. Is printing bi-directional or uni-directional? What are the different results in speed; in quality?
The samples for FLAAR were printed bi-directionally.
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ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
120. Which materials really ought to be printed at the uni-directional mode?
If your media is “dusty” you might test uni-directional printing mode.
121. What is the advertised DPI, and is it true dpi or “apparent” dpi? How is dpi presented (with what adjectives)? How is this dpi calculated? What is the true dpi of this printhead? If the spec sheet uses the
concept of “perceived dpi” or “apparent dpi” how they calculate perceived dpi instead of true dpi?
In the printed specifications the DPI is listed as resolution: maximum 1200 DPI. But when I asked this question verbally, I was told “600 dpi.”
122. How many passes can this printer achieve?
The manual suggests that the printer can achieve 3 passes. But asking directly we learned that it can
achieve 2 to 8 passes.
123. How many print modes are there?
To achieve your desired finished quality, can set the
Speed of the carriage
The resolution
The number of passes.
124. Which materials can be printed fast at 2-pass or 4-pass modes?
The number of passes needed may also depend on how worn the printheads are. If the printheads are old
you may need more passes than when the printheads are new.
125. Can you vary the material feed rate?
Yes, you can vary and control the media feed rate.
126. Can you increase the carriage speed?
Yes, increasing the carriage speed is one way to affect print quality vs print speed.
Printhead carriage and minimum and
maximum head adjustment control.
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ATPColor DFP Series
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Printhead Life Expectancy
127. How long do your printheads really last? Do you have that written in a warranty? If your longevity specs
are in drops, please translate that into liters of ink or square footage of media.
Epson guarantees their heads for about 7 million drops. Ricoh guarantees their heads for 100 billion drops
(this is what I have been told).
When I first began evaluating printers (late 1990’s), I always had to smile when Epson sales reps tried
to claim their heads were permanent. Epson people never admitted their heads wore out from the constant flushing that these finicky heads require. Because Epson heads do not really last as long as they pretend, they are not considered an industrial head. Dimatix Spectra, Konica Minolta, Seiko, Xaar, and Ricoh
heads are considered industrial. Toshiba Tec heads were very popular with Oce Arizona but had issues and
Toshiba did not create enough new generations. So today, 2012-2013, not many printer manufacturers use
Toshiba Tec heads.
128. If piezo heads fail, who is responsible for paying for replacement heads? If thermal heads, who replaces
the heads if they fail before their rated lifespan? What does each printhead cost to replace? Distinguish
price for the printhead and also price for the service technician to come and do the installation if it is
not user-replaceable?
If a piezo head fails it is usually considered the fault of the end-user—unless the head is DOA (Dead On Arrival).
129. How often can you expect head strikes? What causes them? Who will replace the printheads and at
whose cost?
• A head strikes is the most common cause of premature head failure (another cause is constant flushing; the flushing seemingly wears out the nozzle system). A single head strike may wipe out only a few
nozzles, or may kill the entire printhead. Head strikes may be occasioned by a diverse variety of situations:
• Improper loading of the media, which make cause buckling, because the media is caught, or not going
through the printer properly.
• Thin media can curl, thereby causing a head strike on the curled part
• Edge guards, which work on thin materials may be raised too high.
• If media is absorbent, too much ink can make the material bubble up
• If media is curled or bubbled by heat; the head can hit the raised part
• If media is defective to begin with, or uneven, the head can hit the raised part
• If adhesive pulls off the material the adhesive may get stuck on the nozzle plate of the head.
• For a textile printer, an additional cause of printhead failure is the fuzz of the threads which may stick
up and rub the nozzle plate.
• Some material is like sandpaper to the nozzle plate, some papers, and metal (and the metal edge is
another danger to the printhead nozzle plate).
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ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
26
Printhead Positioning
130. Are printheads at an angle, or in a row?
The normal position for printheads is parallel to each other in a row. But there are exceptions, and staggered the positions may have other benefits. Each pattern for positioning the printheads has a reason, but
most printheads are simply parallel to each other in one row.
For this printer, the printhead arrangement is staggered: 3 heads per (color) row; four rows.
Printhead Carriage
131. What brand of guide is used to pull the printhead carriage?
THK brand.
THK guide close-up.
ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
Cleaning and Maintenance
132. How is head cleaning accomplished? Spray, vacuum, suck, manual, other?
Vacuum and pressure; then wiping.
133. How many levels (strengths) of printhead cleaning (purging and/or sucking) can be accomplished via
the firmware (software)?
There is one level of vacuum pressure to clean the heads.
134. Can you purge an individual printhead, or do you need to purge all at once?
You can purge an individual row (several printheads at a time); but not one single printhead individually.
135. Where is the service station?
At the right.
136. Is the service area the same as the parking area?
Yes.
137. Is there a capping station?
Yes, under the removable plate.
Capping station situated under the removable plate, below the
printhead carriage.
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ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
138. Does the manufacturer provide any special cleaning tools?
Ordinary tools are used.
139. Is there an off-printer dip-station or soaking station that is separate from the parking or maintenance
station?
Yes, the dealer will tend to have an ultrasonic head cleaning unit.
140. Does this printer spit, or “weep” at regular intervals?
Solvent inkjet printers spit ink at the end of every pass in order to keep all printhead nozzles open. The
reason is that if you are printing a banner with an area of pure cyan, then the other printheads will not be
jetting ink (since their colors are not called for). In theory these nozzles will clog while not being used. So
spitting allows all nozzles to eject ink occasionally.
Another way to allow all nozzles to squirt ink periodically is to have a band of CMYK or a band of six colors
(CMYK light Cyan light Magenta) at one or both edges of the image, immediately outside the image area.
This pattern causes every color to jet even if these colors are not being printed in the image itself.
The DTP printer spits when this setting is activated.
141. Where does the spit ink go? How do you eventually dispose of the spit ink?
All excess ink goes into the service station, and then into the bottle below.
142. What part(s) of this printer need the most attention to avoid breakdown?
You have to pay attention to keeping the printheads cleaned.
143. What maintenance issues should be noted?
Be sure to keep the linear guide clean.
Ink compartment for containers and waste tanks.
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ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
144. What part(s) of this printer tend to break down the most often?
The part that may wear out is the 3-day valve; it gets clogged.
145. What is the most delicate, or complex, or time-consuming cleaning or maintenance chore?
Cleaning the calender is a tough assignment. So avoid sticky media or any other act that would tend to
leave residue on the surface of the calender.
146. If you change ink, how much hands-on work is required to set up the ink system? Is hand priming or
sucking the ink down the tubes required of the operator? Is head priming automatic, or operator initiated?
Changing from one ink to another ink is technically possible in some printers but is rarely recommended.
147. How much time, media, and ink are used during regular cleaning, calibration, and maintenance?
Most cleaning aspects are automatic (when you tell the system to clean itself). So regular cleaning takes
just a few minutes.
Close-up view of the three-way valves.
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ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
30
148. Is there a sleep mode? Should the machine ever be turned completely off? Does this not entail having a
UPS unit to guarantee it is on all the time?
There is a sleep mode. With most (but not all) printers it is advised to leave in sleep mode rather than being turned completely off (which may entail putting solution in the printheads to replace the ink).
With the ATPColor printer you have a choice of sleep mode, or shut-down mode (with a cleaner in the
heads to replace the ink). Cleaner is logically a more aggressive chemical than ink.
149. How long can the printer sit unused? How should a printer be prepared for sitting unused for a long
time?
This printer can sit unused two or three weeks.
Cleaning and Maintenance: Waste
150. To initiate a purge, where is the
control or button? Is it software
generated or do you have to
press a button? Where is the button located?
Software generated.
151. Where is the waste bottle situated? How much waste ink does
it hold?
The ink waste bottle holds two liters.
152. How often do you need to empty
the waste ink bottle?
Frequency of emptying depends
on how much you print and how
often you purge.
Ink waste bottle can hold up to two litters.
ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
Printer Drivers and Software
153. Are the controls mainly manual or are most actions handled in the software?
Old fashioned printers had most of the controls manually (as switches or buttons) on the printer (front,
sides, and back). Nowadays most of the controls for a printer made in a factory which has advanced past
the previous generation, the controls are in the firmware and in the RIP software.
FLAAR samples in the computer monitor while printing.
RIP Software Features
154. Is a RIP included in the original price?
Yes, you get a RIP from Amica. But you can opt for another RIP if you already have another or wish a main
brand at its standard price.
155. Which RIP software is supported?
Amica, ErgoSoft, Caldera, ColorGate, Onyx
156. If more than one RIP are offered, what are the pros and cons of each RIP?
The advantage of Amica is price (it comes with the printer). The advantage of ErgoSoft is that this company started with textile printers many many years before other RIP companies. An advantage of Caldera
is that it is well known at the high-end. Every printer has pros and cons.
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ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
Ink
157. How many different kinds of ink are available?
Sublimation inks come in several flavors, including oil-based, solvent-based, and water-based. Each kind
of ink has some advantages and perhaps one disadvantage. These also depend on whether you are doing
direct-to-fabric printing, or printing on transfer paper (since transfer paper also has its several issues).
The ATPColor grand-format series uses water based disperse dye ink.
You can select two different inks, based on price difference. Both inks are from known name brands (a
Swiss company (Sensient is identified in a brochure) and a company headquartered in USA).
158. If there are several kinds of ink available, can you switch from one to another?
In theory, yes.
159. How long does it take to switch from one ink to another?
Two to three hours; you mainly flush a lot of cleaner through the ink lines and printheads.
160. Does the printer itself have a means
to keep track of ink usage? Is this a
guestimate, or an actual count of
droplets fired?
The RIP software (depending on the
brand) would keep track of ink usage. Normally this is a guestimate.
161. How much ink is used to print a
square unit?
8 to 15 ml per square meter; depending on what print mode you select.
162. Where are the printer’s ink containers located? Front, back, or sides?
Access is at the back right (when you
are at the back, then the left of the
back).
163. What is the ink usage compared
with a solvent printer?
A textile printer tends to use less
ink per square meter than a solvent
printer.
164. How much ink does the ink container in the printer hold?
Two liters per container.
Ink compartment located at the back right side of the printer.
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ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
165. How is new ink added? Pouring into the on-board container? Switching the container to the new ink
container?
Pouring.
166. How can you see the remaining ink level? Do you have to ask to see the ink mode, or is the status available at all times?
Look at the ink bottle. Also, an InkLow alarm will sound when ink is low.
167. Is there an issue with “Ink Starvation” when you are trying to print at top speeds?
“Ink starvation” means that not enough ink can get to the printheads in fast printing modes. Ink starvation is a real issue that affects even some quarter-million dollar printers. So you need to check with endusers to see if they have issues with ink starvation.
So far we have no report of ink starvation with normal modes on the ATPColor printer.
168. Is there an ink low alarm?
Yes.
169. What filters are on the ink system to trap particles?
There is a 6 micron filter before the sub-tank.
20 micron filter between sub-tank and printhead
final filter is inside the printhead.
170. How often does the filter need to be replaced?
Depends on how much you print; perhaps once a month.
171. What is the cost of a new ink filter?
30 Euros is one price quoted.
Ink pumps detailed view.
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ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
Ink: Cost
172. Does ink come in cartridges or bulk? How large are the ink containers for replacement ink?
Ink tends to come either in bottles (where you pour the ink into the ink container on the printer) or containers that are themselves the ink container: you take the old one out; throw it away; and place the new
container in its place. Cartridges tend to only be used in printers with Epson printheads.
Since this is a professional industrial printer, it uses ink in bottles.
173. What is the cost per container? What is this cost translated to liters?
Cost of ink varies depending on the dealer/distributor, and depends on what country you are in. Usually
the smaller and cheaper the printer, the more the ink costs. The larger the printer is, and the more ink it
uses, the lower the ink is priced.
Ink: Longevity
174. What is the longevity of your dye ink outside in the sun? No lamination, no glass.
Outside in full sun longevity of most disperse dye ink would be three to four months. Inside an airport, a
mall, or other shopping center, longevity is definitely longer.
175. What effect will high humidity have on your dye inks, on your pigmented inks?
Evidently high humidity has some advantages over low humidity.
176. Is the ink of itself waterproof? Or does water resistance happen only on some kinds of media?
Yes, you can wash the fabric. And obviously, how many times you wash it, and how, will affect longevity of
the color.
177. What about solvents such as cleaning solvents? Do they mar, dull, or wash away the ink or change the
surface quality?
You would need to test each cleaning solvent to know.
178. What happens if you seal your prints behind glass to protect them? Will the ink outgas and smear the
glass?
Since the calender is set at 200 degrees it is expected to sublimate all the ink. Thus to seal your prints
behind glass will not automatically engender outgassing. Naturally all this depends on climatic conditions
and ink load.
179. What is the shelf life of the ink?
Shelf life of the ink depends on storage temperature, plus on how honest the company was that delivered
the ink. If the company bought too much ink, and could not sell it fast enough, they might be tempted to
back date the shelf life.
Shelf life of the ink supplied by ATPColor is one year.
34
ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
180. Do you have to shake the ink to get the pigments out of being settled?
No, this is not a pigmented ink (some of which has to be shaken). You do not need to shake dye-based ink.
181. Does the ink rub off?
Under normal conditions you would not expect the ink to rub off. Obviously this depends on the chemical
situation.
Ink: Color Gamut
182. How many colors are used in the ink-set being evaluated here?
CMYK.
183. W
hat colors print best?
Color gamut will depend on the color of the material on which you are printing, on your experience with
color management, and whether you are using canned ICC color profiles or custom profiles that you made
yourself.
Yellow, green turquoise, black all print well. I was pleased with the color pop of what was printed for me
as samples. These were my own photos; these were not samples pimped by a manufacturer to show an
unrealistic color gamut.
Printed FLAAR samples before passing through the heating unit, even
at this point you can see the great color gamut thi\e printer can achieve.
35
ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
Dr. Nicholas Hellmuth and María Renée Ayau, FLAAR technical writer for textiles, examining ATPColor printed samples
Dr. Nicholas Hellmuth holding FLAAR cacao samples.
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ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
37
Media Size
184. What widths can be printed?
ATPColor DFP1320 (3.3 meters), DFP1000 (2.6 meters), DFP740
(1.9 meters).
Media core diameter.
185. Is the width enough for target applications?
Yes, and probably no more is needed.
186. What core diameter(s) of media will this printer accept?
Standard 3”.
3”
187. Are there core adapters to accept other sized cores?
Not at present.
188. What is the maximum roll diameter?
36 cm normal. If you purchase the optional large-roll system
you can take rolls with a diameter up to 66 cm.
189. What thickness media is accepted?
Up to 4 cm, but unless you were printing a rug that thickness would not be needed. And this is not made
to be a rug printer.
190. What length of media tends to be on a roll of material?
Flag media can be up to 500 meters in length on the roll. Display media can be 200-250 meters long. You
will tend to need a lift to move media at 3.3 or 3.2 meter widths.
Media roll on feeding position on the back side of the printer.
ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
191. Can the printer print edge-to-edge?
Yes.
192. Can you manually sheet-feed media? Does it feed easily?
No, you cannot sheet-feed media.
193. Can the machine handle two different rolls of media side by side at the same time?
Yes, if diameter of the material on each roll is the same or at least similar.
194. Can you adjust the rate of media feed?
You need to adjust the rate of feed to remove banding lines caused by media feed that is slightly off. This is
not entirely the fault of the printer but a result of the fact that each different kind of material feeds slightly
differently.
195. Is printhead height adjustment available? Is it manual, automatic, how much?
Yes, manual.
196. Is there a cutter on-board? Is it manual or automatic?
Yes, the printer has an optional cutting system that uses cold knife technology to make sharp flawless
cuts. The In-line cutting system can be stopped or paused without creating defects in the printed fabric
197. Is there an edge or slot for a hand held X-acto blade or knife to cut printed media off the printer?
No.
198. Do you have media length-remaining sensors on your printer? Is it manually set or automatic?
Not yet.
In-line cutting system.
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ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
39
Media: What Materials?
199. Can this printer accept non-coated fabrics?
Coated polyester or polyester blend is better than non-coated fabrics. But some brands and varieties of
non-coated fabric could work for some applications. You would need to try a sample to see.
200. Can this printer accept fabrics with no paper backing?
No need for a paper backing.
201. What textiles does the manufacturer list?
All kinds of normally coated polyester fabrics. It helps if the material is 80% polyester.
202. What textiles can this printer print on perfectly?
Polyester fabrics prepared for digital printing.
203. What materials can this printer print on
successfully?
Polyester fabric, not stretchable.
204. What textiles are a problem but can be
handled, more or less?
Fabrics which stretch too much need a
sticky belt (conveyor belt system).
205. What fabrics are best not to try at all?
Fabrics without polyester base.
206. What about rugs and comparable thick
materials?
If you can find thick material with a polyester top surface, you can always try it. I have
seen many UV-cured and also solvent printers handling rug-like material.
One potential problem with thick material
would be if it were stiff: stiff material might
not curl at the front edge and back edge
(so would not lie flat across the platen).
207. Does the printer manufacturer also make
coatings?
No.
Media samples at ATPColor headquarters.
ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
208. Can the manufacturer toll-coat for an end-user who needs a significant amount of one or two coated
fabrics?
ATPColor is a textile printing system developer and manufacturer; not a manufacturer of ink or media.
209. How much acclimatization time is needed for the media?
Depends on material (and temperature of storage area compared with temperature of the print room).
But usually not an issue.
210. Is there a trough to catch the ink that goes through the weave of the fabric?
Yes, there is an ink trough with sponge and pad to absorb any ink that passes through the fabric
211. How do you clean the trough? Can ink drain down and out of the trough into a waste bottle?
To clean the trough you pull up the sponge pad and throw it away. And wipe down the edges of the
trough. Then cut out and put in a fresh sponge.
212. How does this printer handle ink that goes through the weave but gets stuck as droplets on the back
of the weave? How does it keep these ink drops from getting on the rollers or soiling another part of
the fabric when it reaches the wind-up reel?
There are two issues with printing on fabrics: first, the ink goes through the weave and ends up on the
table or transport belt or platen. Second, the fibers from fabrics or mats can get onto the printhead nozzle
plate and sometimes up into the nozzles.
Here you can see the sponge and pad to absorb the ink that passes through the fabric.
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ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
41
Media Issues
213. What about wheel marks or feeding roller
path marks?
You will not get wheel marks or feeding pinch
roller path marks because there are no such
rollers.
214. Can the media feed without skew?
The next time you go to a trade show, look at
how the media winds up at the lower back of
the printer. Look at the edges of the roll.
More than half the rolls have the material
sticking out irregularly. Some brands have remarkably sloppy wide-up. Yes, naturally this
also depends on the media: cheap low-bid media will tend to wind up a bit more irregularly.
But when I looked at the edges of the wind-up
roll on the ATPColor machine, it was perfectly flush. So this is one of many reasons why I
find that the manufacturer and ATPColor have
been successful to spec out a system which
functions well.
Media wound up on the back side of the printer, as you can see
there is no skew.
Image Quality Issues
215. Can a glossy finish be achieved?
If you use a glossy media the finish will be glossy. If you use a matte media the finish will be matte (so obviously not glossy).
216. H
ow can banding be avoided?
More passes tend to get rid of banding on almost any and all inkjet printers. Of course it helps if the machine is precision engineered so you don’t get much banding at four passes and above. Banding at two
passes is normal. You can eliminate pass-overlap banding by using an interweaving technique (which Mutoh developed and now Roland and others have copied).
You can also use a software solution to remove banding. In effect you print in a pattern so that the normal
person will simply not notice the banding. This solution is provided within the ATPColor firmware.
217. H
ow much banding is reported with this particular printhead?
I have not noticed any banding issues on the samples which were printed while I observed the machine in
action.
ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
Fixation Unit: Calendering System
218. Where is the fixation unit located: physically attached, out in front, separate?
This calendaring unit is physically attached, in the lower half of the printer.
219. What are the advantages of having the unit attached to the printer?
The primary advantage of having the sublimation system attached to the printer is to save space.
220. What sensors are associated with the calendaring unit?
There is an infrared reader on the calendaring system.
The ATPColor printer system can shut off the heater of the calender if the printer is not printing.
221. What kinds of filters can you employ inside the filtration unit?
Do not use “active carbon.”
Applications
222. Does the manufacturer address the overall workflow, or do they just try to sell you the printer and then
sort of abandon you?
If you buy from a generalist inkjet printer dealer you will get the good service for solvent and UV-cured
printers.
If you buy from a company which is focused on textiles, which has years background in textile printing,
then you can expect to have help on the entire overall workflow.
223. What are the applications listed by the manufacturer?
Flags and soft signage are the best applications. But if you are innovative, and if you have clients which are
innovative, surely you can create novel applications.
224. Does the printer allow for perfect registration if printing double-sided?
In past years some other brands (of solvent printers) offered special (expensive) options for doing registered double-sided printing.
But for printing on thin material the color will be visible from both sides anyway. There is no option for
registering double-sided printing with most direct-to-fabric printers. The sublimation chemical process is
not conducive to this kind of process.
42
ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
Productivity and ROI (Return of Investment)
225. Can you sell the output at the machine’s fastest output speed or is the quality at that speed not acceptable to most client standards?
90% of the different brands of printers can’t produce usable output at their fastest claimed speed. So I call
these speeds “junk mode.” It is false advertising in probably half the spec sheets.
I will need to test 3 pass mode. This produces 510 sq meters and hour.
The samples printed for FLAAR were in mode 6+ and produced at 35 square meters per hour. The results
were fully satisfactory (and had brighter color than two other direct-to-fabric printers we tested the previous month).
History and Relationships of the Manufacturer
226. What is the recent history of the manufacturer?
I have seen the owner of ATPColor around the world at pertinent expositions for many many years. He has
now expanded beyond wide-format textile printers into the world of serious grand-format production
(for signage primarily, though you can use the output any way you desire).
227. What partners does this manufacturer have?
The manufacturer has worked with Splash of Color in USA for several years. The manufacturer also has experience with Roland for many years. And in the days of ColorSpan he knew their textile printer inside out.
Today he has experience in China. I see him at the key Chinese expos. It is interesting to note who you do
see at most expos (the owners of the several really leading textile brands) and who is missing (the owners
and managers of the companies that have textile printers in their inventory but that is clearly not their
focus).
ATPColor logically has the
two ink companies as development partners. It is worth
noting that the two are
both major names in textile
inks. Sensient (Switzerland)
is listed by name in one brochure. I have been to the
headquarters of Sensient
ink in Switzerland and can
attest to their capabilities.
43
ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
Comparisons with other Printers
228. When people are considering buying this printer, what other printer(s) are they also looking at?
There are several choices for grand-format textile printers: VUTEk (using a solvent textile ink). There are
several other local models which are not widely exhibited outside their home area. VUTEk obviously is an
international brand.
There are many textile printers using Epson printheads, such as Mimaki, Roland, and Mutoh. Many companies use Mimaki to adapt them to production machines. ATPColor has more experience with Roland so
prefers to concentrate on their series. But Epson printheaded machines are a separate category: we will
address these in a separate FLAAR evaluation.
At the expensive end of the market choices, would be the several Durst textile printers. But these models
have not been exhibited widely in the last two years. It is unclear whether the impressive capability in
producing wide-format UV-cured printers and in-line ceramic printers was able to be transferred to textile
ink reality. Evidently early adopters had problems with ink and other issues. But for UV-cured and in-line
ceramics, Durst is still tops in technology.
The Gandinnovations textile printer was a great idea: to move beyond solvent and UV-cured inks into textile inks. Unfortunately the early inks created issues. I liked the concept but subsequent realty check suggested that the first generation(s) had issues. I would hope the current generation (from Agfa Graphics),
now with its hopefully significantly improved ink, is a workable solution.
The question would be: is Agfa are these “manufacturers” really a textile printer manufacturer, or should
they more be considered an impressive well known distributor? I am not convinced that there is a core or
people within Agfa most large format companies who come from the world of textile printers. The primary distributor of Gandinnovations who focused on textiles is no longer an Agfa dealer.
229. What features on the other printers turn them off?
The most common issues that I hear about on other printers are inks clogging the printheads, and fumes
from inadequate ventilation inside the system.
HP works hard to push their latex ink for textiles. But between the issues of cost of the ink, and lack of
adequate hand on the resulting textile, most dedicated textile printer companies would not tend to focus
on latex ink. Plus latex ink printers are notoriously slow.
The best advertising for disperse dye advantages would be a user who has an HP latex ink printer but went
and bought a textile printer from ATPColor!
230. What aspects of the selected printer help decide in its favor?
For my own judgment, as I have stated before, I prefer a textile printer made by a textile-oriented company.
I do not tend to find a textile printer from a UV-cured manufacturer or solvent ink printer manufacturer as
the best option. In some cases, if your solvent or UV-cured dealer is great to work with, I can understand
why a printshop would opt for a textile printer via a solvent or UV-cured manufacturer. But so far, printers
44
ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
for textiles made by the biggest names in UV-cured printers have not always been totally successful: they
are okay (every printer is good for many things no matter what). But now that I have fifteen years experience evaluating printers, and now that I have several years specifically evaluating grand-format textile
printers, I increasingly would tend to opt for a textile printer primarily from a textile-focused source.
Advertising Claims: realistic, exaggerated, or misleading?
231. What kinds of printed brochures are available?
There is a two page brochure on the DFP series, plus a folding cover.
232. What do these ads claim?
The only statement that I would want to ask about is relative to UV-resistance, as dye ink in general is not
intended for outside. If you were not aware of this in advance, you might mistakenly think that disperse
dye inks can hold up to sun. This is in the enclosure, not in the actual brochure.
But I would estimate that some inks can potentially hold up longer than other inks.
General Considerations
233. Is there a User’s Group specifically for this printer?
There is no user’s group.
234. What will the resale value of your printer be in three to five years? Will either the brand name or model
specifications cause a knowing buyer three years from now to shy away from your printer or cause a
knowing buyer to only want to pay a very low price as compared to the other printers our company is
considering? A company that is no longer in business may cause printers of that brand to lose value in
the used market. Or is there some major technological breakthrough in your brand that will result in
less value for your current model?
ATPColor has been in business for many years. The owner is dedicated to his business. I do not expect this
company to evaporate.
Most printers from Chinese manufacturers have a low resale value in part because they constantly change
their features, so in four years the features of your printer will no longer have spare parts available. But
a European company is required to keep spare parts for several years. Plus, this is not really a “Chinese
printer;” this is a combination of Chinese experience in manufacturing combined with the experience of
ATPColor with textile printing.
45
ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
Comments:
I know the history and background of the factory in Asia where the chassis is contract manufactured to the
specifications developed by ATPColor’s years of experience with textile printers (from the days of Encad and
ColorSpan and now even more experience in the last five years). I also know the owners. I am LAO aware
that the key aspects of this as a textile printer are based on knowledge of ATPColor in Italy. So the physical
printer you see today is a combination of experience with manufacturing wide and grand-format printers
(the factory) and experience with wide-format inkjet printing and inks (ATPColor).
Pros in general:
If you look around, and look at the nice grand format textile printers of other brands, you see printers which
tripped on themselves since the manufacturers came from other backgrounds. The two major brand names
who launched textile printers in the past several years both had endless issues. The reason is easy to understand: these other companies were very good in producing solvent ink printers and UV printers. The other
company was good in producing UV-cured and printers for in-line ceramics. They are tops in their field for
what they have experience in.
But neither of these companies really had adequate experience in textile inks or printing on textiles. From
what I understand, both these companies had issues getting water-based textile inks through the industrial
printheads that they selected.
Here is the immediate difference with ATPColor. This company is dedicated to textile printers. They do not
make UV-cured printers. They do not make solvent ink printers. They concentrate on doing well in their field
of knowledge: printing on polyester fabrics with disperse dye ink.
A benefit of ATPColor is also that you are allowed to select which of two inks you prefer. The primary difference is in price. I know each brand and can say that they are European and American companies (when we
do an evaluation we go into the R&D labs, so we are told the actual ink brands, but it is tradition to sign an
NDA, Non-Disclosure Agreement). So we know the inks but the actual brand names are not placed in the
reports. Once you have the printer yourself you will learn which ink is which and you can make your own
decision.
I have seen the output of both inks over many years. I have been to the R&D labs of one of the manufacturers (the one in Europe). So I have some knowledge that the inks being used are appropriate to the high-end.
Cheap low-bid inks are available worldwide. This is not the goal of most companies (to offer low-bid products whose components no one knows).
The best example of the quality of the factory who made this printer and the engineer who designed it (ATPColor) is that the media winds up evenly. I would estimate that if the media itself is badly wound onto the
original, and if that media core is inaccurate, the media may follow the natural laws of nature (cheap media
often is improperly wound from the factory).
But if you use acceptable media, the feeding path of this printer is frankly remarkable in its ability to wind the
material up neatly and trimly at the end.
46
ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
Pros for the printer portion
As an evaluator, I tend to be skeptical of a printer manufacturer until I can see with my own eyes that the
printer is made by a company with experience and a company that does not want to produce just low-bid
style machines.
I searched around the printer for suggestions that it was sloppily made, and did not notice any place where
it was jerry-rigged. I could write a history book about stores of other brands, from other factories, which
were actually jerry-rigged.
I searched inside and outside to see how much cheap plastic was being used. Actually the chassis appears to
be entirely of well engineered metal. If you want to see flimsy plastic, just lift up on the flaps of the new SureColor models. And of course most entry-level water-based printers nowadays are primarily plastic, though
HP at least has experience in finding a plastic that holds up at least a few years.
But you do not want cheap plastic on a grand-format printer.
The absolute best way to evaluate a printer is to find a printshop using the current model. We have located
a printshop in Europe and will visit them as soon as the additional model arrives (it is my understanding that
they are sufficiently content with their first model from ATPColor that they are buying an additional model.
This also suggests that the first model is making enough profit so that they can buy the additional model for
more production capacity. It is rather tough to find anything more convincing than a printshop who finds a
brand sufficiently good that they buy even more of the same brand. As soon as it is possible to visit this location in Europe we will update this report.
The manual is in acceptable English. I would estimate that the Italian version is in good Italian.
Offers a “quick unrolling” feature so you can get all the media off the core (in case you wish to insepct it, cut
out a sample from the middle, etc).
In summary on the good aspects of this printer I can cite that some customers evidently paid off their machine in two to four months. But with today’s lower prices for finished product, this rate of return is not as
usual as it was in past years. For example, “finishing” the product nowadays is especially time consuming.
47
ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
Pros for the heat fixation (sublimation) unit:
The new model allows you to heat the front or back of the inked media. Flag medis is best sublimated with
the front against the calender. Display media is best sublimated with the back against the calender.
You can also sublimate against the front with protective paper on. Not many (and in some cases not any)
other printer offers these options.
The original models can receive an upgrade kit so you can switch between sublimating the front or back.
Downsides
No printer is perfect. There are thousands of “reviews” on the Internet which proclaim fabulous benefits of
a printer. But most of these are sham reviews, or pseudo-reviews: occasionally by the company selling the
printer! So most are not much more than PR releases.
In order to document that we care about the end-user (the printshop owner, managers, and printer users),
we list both pros and cons. And we actually physically look at the printer (most PR agents are advertising
agency writers; they do not inspect printers in demo rooms and out in real-world printshops). A review with
no mention of a single missing feature is exactly what distinguishes most sham reviews.
I would personally prefer an ink-level indicator in the firmware, so I can see, with a clear vertical column, the
actual ink remaining in each bottle.
It would also be preferable in the jacket to the advertising brochure to give at least a semblance of indication
as to the reality of longevity of disperse dye ink. If the brand they use holds up longer than other brands, and
longer than dye sub via transfer paper, this can be stated. But most people in the industry would consider a
dye-based ink as not very strong against direct sunlight for more than three to four months outside.
We will be inspecting this printer out in the real world in five weeks and will update this FLAAR evaluation
after we learn why did this printshop in Germany select an ATPColor printer over all potential competing
models.
And how has the printer functioned for this printshop. A German printshop will tend to not put up with an
inadequate printer. Plus, a Germanic printshop will have tended to have looked at all other options carefully
before making their decision.
Discussion Points (not a deficiency, but worth discussing)
The following is not a negative point, but needs to be clearly stated. Indeed the fact that ATPColor firmly
supports informing potential buyers is a positive feature. The point is that a grand format printer of this nature is not intended for start-ups. This printer assumes you already have experience with printers (hopefully
printers over 60 inches in width), RIP software and that you already have a good client base.
48
ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
Reality check
You have more chance that your printer solution for textiles will function well if the company that produces
it is dedicated full time to textile printing with inkjet inks.
This is a polite way to say that a textile printer produced by a UV-cured or solvent printer manufacturer may
not be as “finished” as a textile printer which is well thought out by an individual who has all his assets (mental and financial) deep into the world of textile ink chemistry and fabrics.
Each manufacturer has some advantage, but I am still convinced that textile printing is complex enough that
merely labeling a printer as a textile printer is not an adequate solution. Two of the biggest brand names in
the world of UV-cured printing had countless issues when they tried to produce a textile printer. One overcame the majority of issues.
Actually there is a third brand of solvent printer manufacturer who also attempted to produce a textile
printer. They had millions of investment dollars from a textile ink partner and from their home government.
Their printer was exhibited once or twice and never appeared again: not at drupa 2012 or ITMA China 2012 or
anywhere else in 2012 (and hardly anywhere visible in 2011).
When you buy any printer, any ink, be sure you comprehend the full workflow. It is normal that you will
be “sold” the printer as the focus. You will rarely be told about the other equipment you may need for the
workflow.
Here you will not likely be bamboozled by ATPColor. I brought a client printshop to them once, and this client
printshop had zero experience in printing. The managing director of ATPColor suggested they not jump into
textile printing first; that they acquire experience first. This is very rare of a manufacturer to be honest in this
manner. This is one reason that FLAAR accepted the project to evaluate this printer: because we know the
managing director and his company for many years.
The final statement is on color saturation.
Ten years ago at any trade show that I attended, the best color saturation was noticeably one brand. That
company simply produced excellent color saturation.
It is similar today. If you go to a trade show with a lot of textile printers, one or two stand out as having gorgeous color. The other brands are okay, but not as colorful. Obviously a lot of this is the brand and flavor of
ink; another aspect is whether the fabric is matte, satin, or glossy.
And even more depends on the subject matter: what colors are in the image (as some colors reproduce well
(yellow, red, etc) and other colors don’t turn out well at all (most dark colors and/or shadow areas).
About a month ago I tested my own photographs on two expensive wide-format printer systems. The color
did not have very much pop. I was frankly surprised, and disappointed.
I brought other files to Milano, and these images turned out much better. Again, it could have been the ATPColor choice of ink; their better sublimation system; and the choice of media used in their demo room. But
for grand-format size, I found their color what you need: namely COLORFUL.
49
ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
Appendix A
Site-Visit Case Study:
Inspecting a printing company in Europe with two ATPColor printers
Printshop in Western Europe that has the ATPColor 3.2 meter printer, FLAAR site visit.
To learn the facts about whether a printer really functions adequately, it is essential to visit a printshop.
What you see in the printer factory, what you see in the demo room of the distributor are helpful first steps
in evaluating a printer. But the final truth comes when you speak with the operation manager who has to
deal with the printer every day, every month, all year.
Thus it was helpful when it was possible to visit a printshop in Germany which had the ATPColor 3.2 meter
printer.
I have been visiting printshops (and printer factories, and demo rooms, and R&D labs) for over fourteen
years. So I am already familiar with the fact that perhaps a third of all printshop owners do not wish the full
range of their installed printer brands to be identified by name. When a printshop is the local leader in successful signage market, the owners have noticed that competing printshops (who are not yet as successful)
will copy the printers that the #1 printshop owns.
50
ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
Thus the owner politely asked that we not identify the brands of printers which he had in addition to the
ATPColor textile printer. We need to identify the dye-sub printer since this is the printer we are evaluating.
As a courtesy to the company who provided access and hospitality in their frankly remarkable facilities, I
will not name the specific brands nor model names of their other printers. But one aspect which is crucial to
state is that this printing company is one of the more sophisticated printing companies which I have visited.
It is a healthy sized company with ample space and facilities. But most notable is that they have top brands
their workflow.
As an example, many printshops have a good GretagMacbeth or X-rite color spectrophotometer. But the
printshop I visited had the absolute high end spectrophotometer (to be polite, more sophisticated brand
and model than a Gretag or X-Rite). The brand they do have is from a factory which I have visited, so I know
this other brand well.
And so in each part of their workflow:
• Their cutter is the most respected brand in Europe.
• Their older UV-cured printers are a top brand from Israel: I have been to their factory twice, so I know
how sophisticated this brand is (especially at the size of the models I saw here).
• Their other UV-cured printers are, as is typical in this European printing company, simply the top
brand.
As the operation manager said it clearly: if you buy the wrong printer, you may save money up front, but
you end up paying the price with the headaches you face in the next years because your did not really get an
adequate technology.
They indicated which brand and model of new printer will arrive within a few weeks: again, the top ranked
brand that you could find at Drupa or FESPA. As a courtesy I do not mention this brand. But I have been to
their factory five times. I have been deep into their R&D department of this manufacturer, so I know their
engineering experience and resulting quality.
This is the company which selected the 3.2 meter direct-to-fabric printer from ATPColor in Milano, Italia. They
have had this printer almost two years.
This first ATPColor printer had 8 printheads. Now a 12 printhead version is available. Since the first model polyester printer functioned fine and produced output that satisfied the clients, this growing printshop bought
a second ATPColor.
So now both printers are at work side-by-side. The day I visited, both printers were busy producing giant soft
signage.
Why ATPColor and not another brand?
The patient and experienced production manager carefully explained why they did not opt for another
brand. “What counts is the end product quality. Client’s don’t ask what brand.”
“To print on transfer paper and then have to have a separate heat transfer press would add too much expense and take too much space (to have two machines to do what a single ATPColor can produce).” Here I
51
ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
52
will mention that this printshop has more space than most other printshops around the world. But even with
abundant space available they don’t want to waste space with a heat transfer press (plus such a press tends
to need TWO workers to handle a paper hang up; I see this all the time, at every printer expo).
A crucial criteria for selecting ATPColor and their local distributor here in Europe is because “with a really
large company you never know who, when, or how service might respond to an issue. With a small company
as distributor and manufacturer such as ATPColor you can count on more realistic tech support.”
My own comment would be, “A textile printer created by a big-name solvent or UV-cured printer manufacturer may have a “brand name” but not many solvent or UV-cured printer manufacturers really have adequate experience to produce a reliable or innovative textile printer. To be polite I will not bring up all these
brand names again.
ATPColor is one of perhaps four companies around the world who have the experience with textile printing.
I would also point out that this printer has features MISSING from most competitor textile printers. For example, ATPColor has a contact sublimation unit. 90% of the competing brands have only heated air.
The printshop in Western Europe has two ATPColor 3.2 meter printers: earlier model (left) and newest model (right).
First posted October 2012. Updated on December 2012, after site-visit case study in Germany.
ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
53
Appendix B
Using Print Samples from ATPColor
FLAAR assists many museums and
local non-profit organizations, especially in Guatemala. Last month
we donated a set of prints from ATPColor to a local cacao (chocolate)
growers association in the Pacific
Ocean piedmont zone of Guatemala.
They used these prints to decorate
their annual festival. We appreciate
ATPColor sending us these prints by
FedEx (as they were too bulky to fit
in my suitcase).
This use for an expo decoration is one
of a hundred typical applications that
a printshop can provide to clients.
Dr. Nicholas Hellmuth handing a set of cacao prints (printed by ATPColor) to Jorge Estrada for the National Cacao Festival.
ATPColor DFP Series
Direct-to-Fabric Wide-format Inkjet Printing
ATPColor prints exhibited at the National Cacao Festival in
San Antonio Suchitepequez, Guatemala.
54
Textile Printer Reports from 2012
Introductory Textile Printer Reports
This report is not licensed to be distributed by any printer manufacturer on their own web site.
This report is not licensed to be distributed by any dealer or distributor on their own web site.
These may be pirated copies, or may be earlier versions. We may have learned more about the printer and updated our
report (but the manufacturer, distributor, or dealer may not have the most recent information from our evaluation).
Reality Check
Being a university professor for many years does not mean we know
everything. But intellectual curiosity often leads us to enter areas that
are new to us. So we do not shirk from entering areas where we are
obviously not yet expert. If in your years of wide format printing experience have encountered results different that ours, please let us know at
[email protected]. We do not mind eating crow, though so far
it is primarily a different philosophy we practice, because since we are
not dependent on sales commissions we can openly list the glitches and
defects of those printers that have an occasional problem.
FLAAR and most universities have corporate sponsors but FLAAR web
sites do not accept advertising, so we don’t have to kowtow to resellers or manufacturers. We respect their experience and opinion, but we
prefer to utilize our own common sense, our in-house experiences, the
results from printshop site-visit case studies, and comments from the
more than 53,000 of our many readers who have shared their experiences with us via e-mail (the Survey Forms).
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Please Note
________________________________________
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If you receive any FLAAR Report from a sales rep, in addition to being violation of copyright, it is useful to know if there is a more recent
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single favorable comment we made on one nice aspect of their printer,
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features of the printer which did not do so well. For them to correct this
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FLAAR Reports on UV-curable roll-to-roll, flatbed, hybrid, and combo
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So it is safer to ask-before-you-quote a FLAAR review on your product.
Legal notice
Inclusion in this study by itself in no way endorses any printer, media,
ink, RIP or other digital imaging hardware or software. Equally, exclusion
from this study is not intended to discredit any printer, ink, media, or
product.
A printer may change components since we first reviewed it. A component may be defective in the specific machine you buy (which is
obviously not the specific machine we evaluated). And in some factories
they may have forgotten to screw a particular part in correctly. So that
component may break or wear out, and cause downtime (or injury to
the printer operator). There is no realistic way even an evaluation can
offer protection from such normal issues with one manufacturing run.
Advisory
We do our best to obtain information which we consider reliable. But
with hundreds of makes and models of printers, dozens of kinds of ink,
and sometimes when information about them is sparse, or conflicting,
we can only work with what we have available. Thus you should be
sure to rely also on your own research, especially asking around. Find a
trustworthy end-user of the same make and model you need to know
about. If you are thinking of an after-market ink, be sure you speak with
another printer operator to find out how this ink has worked for them.
Do not make a decision solely on the basis of a FLAAR report because
your situation may be totally different than ours. Or we may not have
known about, and hence not written about, one aspect or another
which is crucial before you reach your decision. It is not realistic to
update all the old reports, so if the report was written before 2011, it is
all the more essential to check with end-users. And for inks and media,
one chemical could be off in one batch. There is no way to keep track of
every manufacturing run of each ink. Even major Japanese corporations
have an occasional bad run of ink, or a bad series of printers. While on
the subject of ink, realize that even OEM ink factories occasionally have
a bad batch of ink. What counts is that when this happens that the ink
company apologizes and replaces the ink if this is appropriate. It is not
realistic for us to keep track of every batch of each ink company: some
ink companies make dozens or even hundreds of different inks every
month. What we do keep track of, however, is the long term track record
of a company.
The sources and resources we may list are those we happen to have
read. There may be other web pages or resources that we missed. For
those pages we do list, we have no realistic way to verify the veracity
of all their content. Use your own common sense plus a grain of salt for
those pages which are really just PR releases or outright ads.
We are quite content with the majority of the specific printers, RIPs,
media, and inks we have in the FLAAR facilities. We would obviously
never waste our time learning about a hardware, software, or consumables that we knew in advance would not be good. However even for
us, a product which looks good at a trade show, sounds good in the ad
literature, and works fine in a factory or distributor demo room, may
subsequently turn out to be a lemon under real-world conditions out in
a printshop.
Plus, whether or not the end-user is trained to properly utilize the
product effects whether the product works acceptably, or not. So the
end-user we inspect may later learned to be atypical due to being really
well trained, or have inadequate training.
Or the product may indeed have a glitch but one that is so benign for us,
or maybe we have long ago gotten used to it and have a workaround.
And not all glitches manifest themselves in all situations, so our evaluator may not have been sufficiently affected that he or she made an issue
of any particular situation. Yet such a glitch that we don’t emphasize
may turn out to be adverse for your different or special application
needs.
Equally often, what at first might be blamed on a bad product, often
turns out to be a need of more operator experience and training. More
often than not, after learning more about the product it becomes possible to produce what it was intended to produce. For this reason it is
crucial for the FLAAR team to interact with the manufacturer’s training
center and technicians, so we know more about a hardware or software.
Our evaluations go through a process of acquiring documentation from
a wide range of resources and these naturally include the manufacturer
itself. Obviously we take their viewpoints with a grain of salt but often
we learn tips that are worthy of being passed along.
FLAAR has no way of testing 400+ specifications of any printer, much
less the over 101 different UV printers from more than 46 manufacturers. Same with hundreds of solvent printers and dozens of water-based
printers and the outpouring of new textile printers. We observe as best
we can, but we cannot take each printer apart to inspect each feature.
And for UV printers, these are too expensive to move into our own
facilities for long-range testing, so we do as best as is possible under the
circumstances. And when a deficiency does become apparent, usually
from word-of-mouth or from an end-user, it may take time to get this
written up and issued in a new release.
Another reason why it is essential for you to ask other printshop owners
and printer operators about how Brand X and Y function in the real
world is that issues may exist but it may take months for these issues to
be well enough known for us to know the details. Although often we
know of the issues early, and work to get this information into the PDFs,
access to information varies depending on brand and model. Plus with
over 300 publications, the waiting time to update a specific report may
be several months. Plus, once a printer is considered obsolete, it is not
realistic to update it due to the costs involved. If you received a FLAAR
PDF from a sales rep, they may give you an early version; perhaps there
is a later version that mentions a defect that we learned about later.
For these reasons, every FLAAR Report tries to have its publication date
on the front outside cover (if we updated everything instantly the cost
would be at commercial rates and it would not be possible to cover
these expenses). At the end of most FLAAR Reports there is additionally a list of how many times that report has been updated. A report
with lots of updates means that we are updating that subject based
on availability of new information. If there is no update that is a pretty
good indication that report has not been updated! With 101 models of
UV printers, several hundred solvent printers, and scores of water-based
printers, we tend to give priority to getting new reports out on printers about which not much info at all is available elsewhere. So we are
pretty good about reporting on advances in LED curing. But glitches in
a common water-based printer will take longer to work its way through
our system into an update, especially if the glitch occurs only in certain
circumstances, for example, on one type of media. With several hundred
media types, we may not yet have utilized the problem media. While
on the subject of doing your own research, be sure to ask both the
printer operator and printshop owner or manager: you will generally get
two slightly different stories. A printer operator may be aware of more
glitches of the printer than the owner.
If a printer is no longer a prime model then there is less interest in that
printer, so unless a special budget were available to update old reports,
it is not realistic to update old reports. As always, it is essential for you
to visit printshops that have the printers on your short-list and see how
they function in the real world.
But even when we like a product and recommend it, we still can’t guarantee or certify any make or model nor its profitability in use because
we don’t know the conditions under which a printer system might be
utilized in someone else’s facility. For ink and media, especially aftermarket third-party ink and media, it is essential that you test it first,
under your conditions. We have no way to assure that any ink or media
will be acceptable for your specific needs in your specific print shop.
It is also crucial to realize that an ink (that we inspect, that works well
where we inspect it), your printer, your printhead, the heat, humidity
and dust conditions in your printshop, may cause that ink to react differently in your printer. And, there are different batches of ink. Even in
the really big multi-national billion-dollar ink companies, occasionally
one batch will have issues. There are over 100 ink companies; six colors
per company, many flavors of ink per company per color. We have no
realistic manner of testing each ink.
The same is true of media and substrates. One production run can have
a glitch: chemical or physical, even in the best of companies. About
six years ago, a major Swiss-owned media company, for example, had
several months of media which were almost unusable (turned out they
were rebranding media from China). Yet other kinds of media from the
same company are okay (though we stopped using that brand and
stopped recommending them after all the issues we ourselves experienced).
As a result, products are described “as is” and without warranties as to
performance or merchantability, or of fitness for a particular purpose.
Any such statements in our reports or on our web sites or in discussions
do not constitute warranties and shall not be relied on by the buyer in
deciding whether to purchase and/or use products we discuss because
of the diversity of conditions, materials and/or equipment under which
these products may be used. Thus please recognize that no warranty of
fitness or profitability for a particular purpose is offered.
The user is advised to test products thoroughly before relying on them.
We do not have any special means of analyzing chemical contents or
flammability of inks, media, or laminates, nor how these need to be
controlled by local laws in your community. There may well be hazardous chemicals, or outgassing that we are not aware of. Be aware that
some inks have severe health hazards associated with them. Some are
hazardous to breathe; others are hazardous if you get them on your skin.
For example, some chemicals such as cyclohexanone do not sound like
chemicals you want to breathe every day. Be sure to obtain, read, and
understand the MSDS sheets for the inks, media, and laminates that you
intend to use. Both solvent, eco-solvent, and UV-curable inks are substances whose full range of health and environmental hazards are not
yet fully revealed. It is essential you use common sense and in general
be realistic about the hazards involved, especially those which are not
listed or which have not yet been described. FLAAR is not able to list all
hazards since we are not necessarily aware of the chemical components
of the products we discuss. Plus, there is no realistic way to know if all
MSDS sheets are honest to begin with! Our reports are on usability, not
on health hazards.
Most inks are clearly not intended to be consumed. Obviously these
tend to be solvent inks and UV-curable inks. Yet other inks are edible,
seriously, they are printed on birthday cakes. Indeed Sensient is a leader
in a new era of edible inks. Therefore the user must assume the entire
risk of ascertaining information on the chemical contents and flammability regulations relative to inks, media or laminates as well as using any
described hardware, software, accessory, service, technique or products.
We have no idea of your client’s expectations. What students on our
campus will accept may not be the same as your Fortune 500 clients.
In many cases we have not ourselves used the products but are basing
our discussion on having seen them at a trade show, during visiting a
print shop, or having been informed about a product via e-mail or other
communication.
Results you see at trade shows may not
be realistic
Be aware that trade show results may not be realistic. Trade shows are
idealized situations, with full-time tech support to keep things running.
The images at a trade show may be tweaked. Other images make be
“faked” in the sense of slyly putting on primer without telling the people
who inspect the prints. Most UV inks don’t stick to all materials; many
materials need to be treated.
Or the UV prints may be top-coated so that you can’t do a realistic
scratch test.
Booth personnel have many standard tricks that they use to make their
output look gorgeous. In about half the cases you will not likely obtain
these results in real life: in most cases they are printing uni-directional,
which may be twice as slow as bi-directional.
Trade show examples tend to be on the absolutely best media. When
you attempt to save money and use economy media you will quickly
notice that you do not get anywhere near the same results as you saw
in the manufacturer’s trade show booth, or pictured in their glossy
advertisement. Five years ago we noticed Epson was laminating prints
to show glossy output because their pigmented inks could not print on
actual glossy media. The same equipment, inks, media, and software
may not work as well in your facility as we, or you, see it at a trade show.
All the more reason to test before you buy; and keep testing before
you make your final payment. Your ultimate protection is to use a gold
American Express credit card so you can have leverage when you ask for
your money back if the product fails.
Images printed at trade show may be in uni-directional mode: so you
may not realize the printer has bi-directional (curing) banding defects
until you unpack it in your printshop. Bi-directional curing banding is
also known as the lawnmower effect. Many printers have this defect;
sometimes certain modes can get rid of it, but are so slow that they are
not productive.
You absolutely need to do print samples with your own images and the
kind provided by your clients. Do not rely on the stock photos provided
by the printer, ink, media, or RIP manufacturer or reseller. They may be
using special images which they know in advance will look fabulous on
their printer. Equally well, if you send your sample images to the dealer,
don’t be surprised if they come back looking awful. That is because
many dealers won’t make a serious effort to tweak their machine for
your kind of image. They may use fast speed just to get the job done
(this will result in low quality). Check with other people in your area, or
in the same kind of print business that you do. Don’t rely on references
from the reseller or manufacturer (you will get their pet locations which
may be unrealistically gushy): find someone on your own.
Results you see in a manufacturers or master distributors demo room may not be realistic
We are learning that what you see in a demo room may not be what
performance you will receive in your own printshop. The temperature,
humidity, and air quality in your city may be totally different than the
skillfully controlled conditions in a demo room.
And, many printers look great when they are new and in a demo room.
But once the ink has been flowing through the ink delivery system and
printheads for several months, you may experience issues that were not
observable in the demo room. In other words, a report based on demo
room observations is a first step. YOU still need to check with end-users
to learn the difference between performance in the demo room and
performance out in the real world.
Factors influencing output
Heat, humidity, static, dust, experience level of your workers (whether
they are new or have prior years experience): these are all factors that
will differ in your place of business as compared with test results or
demo room results.
Actually you may have people with even more experience than we do,
since we deliberately use students to approximate newbies. FLAAR is
devoted to assisting newcomers learn about digital imaging hardware
and software. This is why Nicholas Hellmuth is considered the “Johnny
Appleseed” of wide format inkjet printers.
Therefore this report does not warranty any product for any quality,
performance or fitness for any specific task, since we do not know the
situation in which you intend to use the hardware or software. Nor is
there any warranty or guarantee that the output of these products will
produce salable goods, since we do not know what kind of ink or media
you intend to use, nor the needs of your clients. A further reason that
no one can realistically speak for all aspects of any one hardware or
software is that each of these products may require additional hardware
or software to reach its full potential.
For example, you will most likely need a color management system
which implies color measurement tools and software. To handle ICC
color profiles, you may need ICC color profile generation software and
a spectrophotometer since often the stock pre-packaged ICC color profiles which come with the ink, media, printers and/or RIPs may not work
in your situation. Not all RIPs handle color management equally, or may
work better for some printer-ink-media combinations than for others.
Please be aware that our comments or evaluations on any after-market
ink would need the end-user to use customized ICC profiles (and not
merely generic profiles).
Be aware that some RIPs can only accept ICC color profiles: you quickly
find out the hard way that you can’t tweak these profiles nor generate
new ones. So be sure to get a RIP which can handle all aspects of color
management. Many RIPs come in different levels. You may buy one level
and be disappointed that the RIP won’t do everything. That’s because
those features you may be lacking are available only in the next level
higher of that RIP, often at considerable extra cost. Same thing in the
progression of Chevy through Pontiac to Cadillac, or the new Suburbans. A Chevy Suburban simply does not have all the bells and whistles
of the Cadillac Escalade version of this SUV.
Don’t blame us… besides, that’s why we are warning you. This is why we
have a Survey Form, so we can learn when you find products that are
inadequate. We let the manufacturers know when end users complain
about their products so that the manufacturers can resolve the situation
when they next redesign the system.
Most newer printer models tend to overcome deficiencies of earlier
models. It is possible that our comparative comments point out a glitch
in a particular printer that has been taken care of through an improvement in firmware or even an entirely new printer model. So if we point
out a deficiency in a particular printer brand, the model you may buy
may not exhibit this headache, or your kind of printing may not trigger
the problem. Or you may find a work-around.
Just remember that every machine has quirks, even the ones we like. It
is possible that the particular kind of images, resolution, inks, media, or
other factors in your facility are sufficiently different than in ours that a
printer which works just fine for us may be totally unsatisfactory for you
and your clients. However it may be that the specific kind of printing
you need to do may never occasion that shortcoming. Or, it may be that
your printer was manufactured on a Monday and has defects that are
atypical, show up more in the kind of media you use which we may not
use as often or at all during our evaluations. Equally possibly a printer
that was a disaster for someone else may work flawlessly for you and be
a real moneymaker for your company.
So if we inspect a printer in a printshop (a site-visit case study), and that
owner/operator is content with their printer and we mention this; don’t
expect that you will automatically get the same results in your own
printshop.
In some cases a product may work better on a Macintosh than on a PC.
RIP software may function well with one operating system yet have
bugs and crash on the same platform but with a different operating
system. Thus be sure to test a printer under your own specific work
conditions before you buy.
And if a printer, RIP, media, or ink does not function, return it with no
ands, ifs or buts. Your best defense is to show an advertising claim that
the printer simply can’t achieve. Such advertising claims are in violation
of federal regulations, and the printer companies know they are liable
for misleading the public.
But before you make a federal case, just be sure that many of the issues
are not user error or unfamiliarity. It may be that training or an additional accessory can make the printer do what you need it to accomplish. Of
course if the printer ads did not warn you that you had to purchase the
additional pricey accessory, that is a whole other issue. Our reviews do
not cover accessories since they are endless, as is the range of training,
or lack thereof, among users.
The major causes of printer breakdown and failure is lack of maintenance, poor maintenance, spotty maintenance, or trying to jerry-rig
some part of the printer. The equally common cause of printer breakdown is improper use, generally due from lack of training or experience.
Another factor is whether you utilize your printer all day every day. Most
solvent and UV printers work best if used frequently. If you are not going
to use your printer for two or three days, you have to put flush into the
system and prepare it for hibernation (even if for only four or five days).
Then you have to flush the ink system all over again.
Also realize that the surface of inkjet prints are fragile and generally
require lamination to survive much usage. Lamination comes in many
kinds, and it is worth finding a reliable lamination company and receiving training on their products.
Also realize that no hybrid or combo UV printer can feed all kinds of
rigid materials precisely. Some materials feed well; others feed poorly;
others will skew.
Although we have found several makes and models to work very well
in our facilities, how well they work in your facilities may also depend
on your local dealer. Some dealers are excellent; others just sell you a
box and can’t provide much service after the sale. Indeed some low-bid
Internet sales sources may have no technical backup whatsoever. If you
pay low-bid price, you can’t realistically expect special maintenance
services or tech support later on from any other dealer (they will tell
you to return to where you paid for the product). This is why we make
an effort to find out which dealers are recommendable. Obviously there
are many other dealers who are also good, but we do not always know
them. To protect yourself further, always pay with a level of credit card
which allows you to refuse payment if you have end up with a lemon. A
Gold American Express card allows you to refuse payment even months
after the sale. This card may also extend your warranty agreement in
some cases (check first).
Most of the readers of the FLAAR Reports look to see what printers we
use in our own facilities. Readers realize that we will have selected the
printers that we like based on years of experience and research. Indeed
we have met people at trade shows who told us they use the FLAAR
web site reports as the shopping list for their corporate purchases.
Yes, it is rather self-evident that we would never ask a manufacturer
to send a product which we knew in advance from our studies was no
good. But there are a few other printers which are great but we simply
do not have them in our facilities yet.
So if a printer is not made available by its manufacturer, then there is
no way we can afford to have all these makes and models in our facility.
Thus to learn about models which we do not feature, be sure to ask
around in other print shops, with IT people in other corporations, at your
local university or community college. Go to trade shows….but don’t
use only the booth…ask questions of people in the elevator, in line at
the restaurant, anywhere to escape the smothering hype you get in the
booth.
Realize that a FLAAR Report on a printer is not by itself a recommendation of that printer. In your local temperature, in your local humidity,
with the dust that is in your local air, with your local operator, and with
disorientation of the insides of a printer during rough shipment and
installation, we have no knowledge of what conditions you will face in
your own printshop. We tend to inspect a printer first in the manufacturing plant demo room: no disjointed parts from any shipment since this
printer has not been lifted by cranes and run over a rough pot-holed
highway or kept in sweltering heat or freezing cold during shipment.
Taking into consideration we do not know the conditions in which you
may be using your hardware, software, or consumables, neither the author nor FLAAR nor either university is liable for liability, loss or damage
caused either directly or indirectly by the suggestions in this report nor
by hardware, software, or techniques described herein because.
Availability of spare parts
may be a significant issue
Chinese printers tend to switch suppliers for spare parts every month or
so. So getting spare parts for a Chinese printer will be a challenge even
if the distributor or manufacturer actually respond to your e-mails at all.
Fortunately some companies to have a fair record of response; Teckwin
is one (based on a case of two problematical hybrid UV printers in Guatemala). The distributor said that Teckwin sent a second printer at their
own expense and sent tech support personnel at their expense also.
But unfortunately both the hybrid UV printers are still abandoned in the
warehouse of the distributor; they were still there in January 2009. But
Teckwin has the highest rating of any Chinese company for interest in
quality control and realization that it is not good PR to abandon a client
or reseller or distributor all together.
Recently we have heard many reports of issues of getting parts from
manufacturers in other countries (not Asia). So just because you printer
is made in an industrialized country, if you are in the US and the manufacturer is X-thousand kilometers or miles away, the wait may be many
days, or weeks.
Lack of Tech Support Personnel is increasing
The recession resulted in tech support issues: some manufacturers
may need to skimp on quality control during a recession, or switch to
cheaper parts suppliers. Plus they are not hiring enough tech support
during a recession. So the bigger and more successful the company, in
some cases the worse these particular problems may be.
When a distributor drops distribution, you may get
no more tech support!
If your distributor has issues with the manufacturer, you may be abandoned if that distributor drops the product.
If another distributor takes up that product, they may not provide you
tech support because you did not buy the printer from them.
Occasionally even the manufacturer goes bankrupt!
Even major Swiss printer manufacturers have had issues and gone out
of business (for their wide-format printers). THREE Swiss manufacturers
are in this list actually. There are also companies in Canada, USA, and
Europe which had corporate meltdown: Gandinnovations is the best
example but there are many others. Neolt recently went into reognization (July 2012) (a polite way of saying downsizing after filing a court
case which would be roughly comparable to Chapter 11 in the USA).
Most companies studiously avoid using the word “pleading bankruptcy”
but to a lay person it’s very close to the same.
In some cases the company continues (Neolt we hope is in this category).
Or sometimes a manufacturer simply runs out of money. They avoid
publically announcing this but the effect is similar to Chapter 11 or
banktuptcy: downsizing, and technical support may drop. Plus you may
not get much innovation from a company which can’t afford to pay its
bills.
Any printer may take a few months to break in
Any new printer, no matter who the manufacturer, or how good is the
engineering and electronics, will tend to have teething issues. Until
the firmware is updated, you may be a beta tester. This does not mean
the printer should be avoided, just realize that you may have some
downtime and a few headaches. Of course the worst case scenario
for this was the half-million dollar Lüscher JetPrint: so being “Made in
Switzerland” was not much help.
Counterfeit parts are a problem with many printers made in China
Several years ago many UV printers made in China and some made
elsewhere in Asia had counterfeit parts. No evaluation has the funding
available to check parts inside any printer to see if they are from the
European, Japanese, or American manufacturer, or if they are a clever
counterfeits. So when we mention a brand name, this is a brand name;
this is not a guarantee the part is not counterfeited.
Be realistic and aware that not all materials can be
printed on equally well
Many materials don’t feed well through hybrid (pinch roller on grit roller
systems) or combo UV systems (with transport belts). Banding, both
from poor feeding, and from bi-directional (lawnmower effect) are common on many UV-curable inkjet printers.
It is typical for some enthusiastic vendors to claim verbally that their
printer can print on anything and everything. But once you unpack the
printer and set it up, you find that it requires primer on some materials;
on other materials it adheres for a few weeks but then falls off.
And on most hybrid and many combo printers, some heavy, thick, or
smooth-surfaced materials skew badly. Since the claim that the printer
will print on everything is usually verbal, it is tough to prove this aspect
of misleading advertising to a jury.
Not all inks can print on all materials. And at a trade show, many of the
materials you see so nicely printed on, the manufacturer may be adding
a primer at night or early in the morning: before you see the machine
printing on this material.
We feel that the pros and cons of each product speak more than
adequately for themselves. Just position the ad claims on the left: put
the actual performance results on the right. The unscrupulous hype for
some printers is fairly evident rather quickly.
Be sure to check all FLAAR resources
Please realize that with over 200 different FLAAR Reports on UV printers,
you need to be sure to check the more obscure ones too. If a printer has
a printhead issue, the nitty gritty of this may be in the FLAAR Report
on printheads. The report on the model is a general introduction; if we
discussed the intimate details of printheads then some readers might
fall asleep. And obviously do not limit yourself to the free reports. The
technical details may be in the reports that have a price to them. Our
readers have said they prefer to have the general basics, and to park the
real technical material in other reports that people can buy if they really
want that level of information.
So it may be best to ask for personal consulting. The details of the
problems with the ColorSpan 5400uv series are rather complex: namely
the center row of the Ricoh printheads. This would require an expensive
graphic designer and consultants to show the details. And the design of
the printhead would probably be altered by the time we did any of this
anyway. So it is essential to talk with people: with other end-users, and
with FLAAR in person on a consulting basis.
Acknowledgements
With 15 employees the funding has to come from somewhere, so we
do welcome project sponsorship, research grants, contributions that
facilitate our educational programs, scholarships for co-op interns and
graduate students, and comparable project-oriented funding from
manufacturers. The benefit for the end-user is a principle called academic freedom, in this case,
• the freedom of a professor or student to speak out relative to the
pros and cons of any equipment brought to them to benchmark.
• The freedom to design the research project without outside meddling from the manufacturer.
Fortunately, our budget is lean and cost effective as you would expect
for a non-profit research institute. As long as we are not desperate for
money we can avoid the temptation to accept payment for reprinting
corporate PR hype. So the funding is used for practical research. We do
not accept (nor believe) and certainly do not regurgitate corporate PR.
For example, how many manufacturer’s PR photos of their products
have you seen in our reports or on our web sites?
Besides, it does not take any money to see which printers and RIPs
function as advertised and which don’t. We saw one hyped printer grind
to a halt, malfunction, or otherwise publicly display its incapabilities at
several trade shows in a row. At each of those same trade shows another
brand had over 30 of their printers in booths in virtually every hall, each
one producing museum quality exhibits. Not our fault when we report
what we see over and over and over again. One of our readers wrote us
recently, “Nicholas, last month you recommended the …… as one of
several possible printers for our needs; we bought this. It was the best
capital expenditure we have made in the last several years. Just wanted
to tell you how much we appreciate your evaluations….”
FLAAR is a non-profit educational and research organization dedicated
for over 36 years to professional photography in the arts, tropical flora
and fauna, architectural history, and landscape panorama photography.
Our digital imaging phase is a result of substantial funding in 1996 from
the Japanese Ministry of Public Education for a study of scanning and
digital image storage options. This grant was via Japan’s National Museum of Ethnology, Osaka, Japan. That same year FLAAR also received a
grant of $100,000 from an American foundation to do a feasibility study
of digital imaging in general and the scanning of photographic archives
in particular.
The FLAAR web sites began initially as the report on the results of these
studies of scanners. Once we had the digital images we began to experiment with digital printers. People began to comment that our reports
were unique and very helpful. So by 1999 we had entire sections on
large format printers.
FLAAR has existed since 1969, long before inkjet printers existed. Indeed
we were writing about digital imaging before HP even had a color inkjet
system available. In 2000 FLAAR received an educational grant from
Hewlett-Packard large format division, Barcelona, Spain, for training, for
equipment, and to improve the design and navigation on the main web
sites of the FLAAR Network. This grant ran its natural course, and like all
grants, reached its finishing point, in this case late 2005.
In some cases the sponsorship process begins when we hear end-users
talking about a product they have found to be better than other brands.
We keep our ears open, and when we spot an especially good product,
this is the company we seek sponsorship from. It would not be wise of
us to seek sponsorship from a company with a sub-standard or otherwise potentially defective printer. So we usually know which printers are
considered by end-users to be among the better brands before we seek
sponsorship. After all, out of the by now one million readers, we have
heard plenty about every single printer out there.
We thank MacDermid ColorSpan (now part of HP), Hewlett-Packard,
Parrot Digigraphic, Color DNA, Canon, Gandinnovations, and other
companies for providing funding for technology training for the FLAAR
staff and our colleagues at Bowling Green State University in past years
and for funds to allow us to attend all major international trade shows,
which are ideal locations for us to gather information. We thank ATPColor, Sun LLC, (EFI Rastek, EFI VUTEk, Drytac, DigiFab, Seiko II, Hongsam
ink, InkWin ink and Dilli for providing funds so that we can make more of
our publications free to end-users. During 2000-2001 we had grants to
cover all the costs of our publications, and all FLAAR Reports were free in
those early years. As that early grant naturally expired after a few years,
we had to begin charging for some of our reports to cover costs. Now (in
2012-2013), we are seeking corporate sponsorship so we can gradually
make another 20% of our publications free to our readers.
Since 2006 we do a major part of our evaluations at the factory and
headquarters demo room. Since the university does not fund any of
these trips, it is traditional for the manufacturer to fund a research sponsorship. In the US this is how most university projects are initiated for
decades now, and it is increasing. In fact there is a university in Austria
that is not an “edu” but is a “GmbH”, funded by the chamber of commerce of that part of Austria. In other words, a university as an educational institution, but functioning in the real world as an actual business.
This is a sensible model, especially when FLAAR staff need to be on the
road over a quarter of a million miles per year (roughly over 400,000 km
per year total for the staff ). Obviously this travel is hosted since unless
money falls from heaven there most realistic way to obtain funding to
get to the demo rooms for training is direct from the source.
It has been helpful when companies make it possible for us to fly to their
headquarters so we can inspect their manufacturing facilities, demo
rooms, and especially when the companies make their research, engineering and ink chemistry staff available for discussions. When I received
my education at Harvard I was taught to have a desire to learn new
things. This has guided my entire life and is what led me into wide-format digital imaging technology: it is constantly getting better and there
is a lot to learn every month. Thus I actively seek access to improving my
understanding of wide format printer technology so that we can better
provide information to the approximately quarter-million+ readers of
our solvent and UV printer web site (www.large-format printers.org) and
the over half a million who read either our wide-format-printers.org site
or our roughly half million combined who read our digital-photography.
org and www.FineArtGicleePrinters.org sites.
Barbieri electronic (color management), Caldera (RIP), ColorSpan,
DEC, Durst, EFI, EskoArtwork, Gerber, Grapo, IP&I, Mimaki USA, Mutoh,
Obeikan, Dilli, Drytac, JETRIX, GCC, NUR, Oce, Shiraz (RIP), Sky Air-Ship,
Sun, Teckwin, VUTEk, WP Digital, Polytype, Xerox, Yuhan-Kimberly, MTEX,
Decal, DigiDelta, Zünd have each brought FLAAR staff to their headquarters and printer factories. Sepiax, AT Inks, Bordeaux, InkWin, Sepiax,
Sam-Ink, Jetbest, Hongsam, InkTec, and Sunflower ink have brought us
to inspect their ink manufacturing facilities and demo rooms. Notice
that we interact with a wide range of companies: it is more helpful to
our readers when we interact with many different companies rather
than just one. However each ink company makes many products and
merely because we have been to their factory does not automatically
mean that we recommend their inks. It is important that we also visit
end-users, and this has not been possible with Bordeaux or Sunflower
inks.
We have visited the world headquarters and demo rooms of HP in
Barcelona and received informative and helpful technology briefings
from HP about every two years. We are under NDA as to the subjects
discussed but it is important that we be open where we have visited. Mimaki Europe has had FLAAR as their guest in Europe to introduce their
flatbed UV printer, as have other UV-curable manufacturers, again, under NDA as to the details since often we are present at meetings where
unreleased products are discussed. Xaar has hosted an informative visit
to their world headquarters in the UK. You don’t get this level of access
from a trade magazine writer, and I can assure you, we are provided
much more detailed information and documentation in our visits than
would be provided to a magazine author or editor. Companies have
learned that it’s a lot better to let us know up front and in advance the
issues and glitches with their printers, since they now know we will find
out sooner or later on our own. They actually tell us they realize we will
find out on our own anyway.
Contributions, grant, sponsorships, and project funds from these
companies are also used to improve the design and appearance of the
web sites of the FLAAR Information Network. We thank Canon, ColorSpan, HP, ITNH, and Mimaki for providing wide format printers, inks, and
media to the universities where FLAAR does research on wide format
digital imaging. We thank Epson America for providing an Epson 7500
printer many years ago, and Parrot Digigraphic for providing three different models of Epson inkjet printers to our facilities on loan at BGSU
(5500, 7600, 7800). We thank Mimaki USA for providing a JV4 and then
a Mimaki TX-1600s textile printer and Improved Technologies (ITNH)
providing their Ixia model of the Iris 3047 giclee printer.
We thank 3P Inkjet Textiles and HP for providing inkjet textiles so
we could learn about the different results on the various textiles. IJ
Technologies, 3P Inkjet Textiles, ColorSpan, Encad, HP, Nan Ya Pepa,
Oracal, Tara and other companies have provided inkjet media so we
can try it out and see how it works (or not as the case may be; several
inkjet media failed miserably, one from Taiwan, the other evidently from
Germany!). We thank Aurelon, Canon, ColorGate, ColorSpan, ErgoSoft,
HP, PerfectProof, PosterJet, Onyx, Ilford, CSE ColorBurst, ScanvecAmiable,
Wasatch and many other RIP companies for providing their hardware
and software RIPs.
We thank Dell Computers for providing awesome workstations for
testing RIP software and content creation with Adobe Photoshop and
other programs. We also appreciate the substantial amount of software
provided by Adobe. As with other product loaned or provided courtesy
of ProVar LLC (especially the 23” monitors which makes it so much easier
to work on multiple documents side by side).
We thank Betterlight, Calumet Photographic, Global Graphics, Westcott,
Global Imaging Inc. Phase One, and Bogen Imaging for helping to equip
our archaeological photo studios at the university and its archaeology
museum in Guatemala. Heidelberg, Scitex, CreoScitex (now Kodak),
Parrot Digigraphic and Cruse, both in Germany, have kindly provided
scanners for our staff to evaluate.
We really liked some of the results whereas some of the other products
were a bit disappointing. Providing samples does not influence the
evaluations because the evaluators are students, professors, and staff
of Bowling Green State University. These personnel are not hired by
any inkjet printer company; they were universities employees (as was
also true for Nicholas Hellmuth). The testing person for the HP ColorPro
(desktop printer) said he frankly preferred his Epson printer. When we
saw the rest results we did not include this Hewlett-Packard ColorPro
printer on our list of recommended printers, but we love our HP DesignJet 5000ps so much we now have two of them, one at each university.
Sometimes we hear horror stories about a printer. The only way we can
tell whether this is the fault of the printer design, or lack of training of
the operator, is to have the printer ourselves in-house. Of course some
printer manufacturers don’t understand the reasons we need to have
each make and model; they are used to loaning their demo units for a
week or so. That is obviously inadequate for a serious review.
Some of the media provided to us failed miserably. Three printers failed
to meet common sense usability and printability standards as well (HP
1055, one older desktop model (HP Color Pro GA), and one Epson). Yet
we know other users who had better results; maybe ours came down
the assembly line on a Monday or Friday afternoon, when workers were
not attentive. One costly color management software package was
judged “incapable” by two reviewers (one from the university; second
was an outside user who had made the mistake of buying this package).
So it’s obvious that providing products or even a grant is no shield from
having your products fail a FLAAR evaluation. The reason is clear: the
end user is our judge. The entire FLAAR service program is to assist the
people who need to use digital imaging hardware and software. If a
product functions we find out and promulgate the good news. If a product is a failure, or more likely, needs some improvement in the next generation, we let people know. If a product is hyped by what an informed
user would recognize as potentially false and misleading nonsense, then
we point out the pathetic discrepancies very clearly.
This is what you should expect from an institute which is headed by a
professor.
Actually, most of our reviews are based on comments by end users. We use their tips to check out pros and cons of virtually every product we discuss. You can’t fool a print shop owner whose printer simply fails to function as advertised. And equally, a sign shop owner who earns a million dollars a year from a single printer brand makes an impact on us as well. We have multiple owners of ColorSpan printers tell us that this printer is their
real money earner for example. We know other print shops where their primarily income is from Encad printers. Kinkos has settled on the HP 5000 as
its main moneymaker production machine, and so on.
Yet we have documentation of several print shop companies whose business was ruined by specific brands that failed repeatedly. It is noteworthy
that it is always the same brand or printer at both locations: one due to banding and printheads then simply no longer printing one color; the other
brand due to pokiness of the printer simply not being competitively fast enough. Same with RIPs, we have consistent statements of people using
one RIP, and only realizing how weak it was when they tried another brand which they found substantially better. Thus we note that companies
which experiment with more than one brand of product tend to realize more quickly which brand is best. This is where FLAAR is in an ideal situation:
we have nine RIPs and 25 printers. Hence it is logical that we have figured out which are best for our situation.
Grant funding, sponsorship, demonstration equipment, and training are supplied from all sides of the spectrum of printer equipment and software
engineering companies. Thus, there is no incentive to favor one faction over another. We receive support from three manufacturers of thermal printheads (Canon, ColorSpan and HP) and also have multiple printers from three manufacturers of piezo printers (Epson, Seiko, Mutoh, and Mimaki).
This is because piezo has definite advantage for some applications; thermal printheads have advantages in different applications. Our reviews have
universal appeal precisely because we feature all competing printhead technologies. Every printer, RIPs, inks, or media we have reviewed have
good points in addition to weaknesses. Both X-Rite and competitor GretagMacbeth provided spectrophotometers. Again, when all sides assist this
program there is no incentive to favor one by trashing the other. Printer manufacturer ad campaigns are their own worst enemy. If a printer did not
make false and misleading claims, then we would have nothing to fill our reviews with refuting the utter nonsense that is foisted on the buying
public.
It is not our fault if some printers are more user friendly, print on more media than other brands. It is not our fault that the competing printers are ink
guzzlers, are slow beyond belief, and tend to band or drop out colors all together. We don’t need to be paid by the printer companies whose products work so nicely in both our universities on a daily basis. The printers which failed did so in front of our own eyes and in the print shops of people
we check with. And actually we do try to find some redeeming feature in the slow, ink gulping brands: they do have a better dithering pattern; they
can take thick media that absolutely won’t feed through an HP. So we do work hard at finding the beneficial features even of printers are otherwise
get the most critique from our readers. Over one million people will read the FLAAR Information Network in the next 12 months; 480,000 people will
be exposed to our reports on wide format printers from combined total of our three sites on these themes. You can be assured that we hear plenty
of comments from our readers about which printers function, and which printers fail to achieve what their advertising hype so loudly claims.
An evaluation is a professional service, and at FLAAR is based on more than 12 years of experience. An evaluation of a printer, an ink, media, substrate, a software, laminator, cutter or whatever part of the digital printing workflow is intended to provide feedback to all sides. The manufacturers
appreciate learning from FLAAR what features of their printers need improvement. In probably half the manufacturers FLAAR has dealt with, people
inside the company did not, themselves, want to tell their boss that their pet printer was a dog. So printer, software, and component manufacturers
have learned that investing in a FLAAR evaluation of their product provides them with useful return on investment. Of course if a printer manufacturer wants only a slick Success Story, or what we call a “suck up review” that simply panders to the manufacturer, obviously FLAAR is not a good
place to dare to ask for such a review. In several instances it was FLAAR Reports that allowed a company to either improve their printer, or drop it and
start from scratch and design a new and better one.
And naturally end-users like the opportunity to learn about various printers from a single source that covers the entire range from UV through latex
through all flavors of solvent.
We have also learned that distributors often prefer to accept for distribution a printer or other product on which a FLAAR Report already exists.
We turn down offers of funding every year. These offers come from PO Box enterprises or products with no clearly visible point of manufacture.
Usually the company making the offer presumes they can buy advertising space just by paying money. But that is not what our readers want, so we
politely do not accept such offers of money.
Contributions, grants, sponsorships, and funding for surveys, studies and research is, however, open to a company who has an accepted standing
in the industry. It is helpful if the company has a visible presence at leading trade shows and can provide references from both end users and from
within the industry. Where possible we prefer to visit the company in person or at least check them out at a trade show. Obviously the product
needs to have a proven track record too. Competing companies are equally encouraged to support the FLAAR system. We feel that readers deserve
to have access to competing information. Competition is the cornerstone of American individualism and technological advancement.
FLAAR also covers its costs of maintaining the immense system of 8 web sites in three languages and its facilities in part by serving as a consultant
such as assisting inkjet manufacturers learn more about the pros and cons of their own printers as well as how to improve their next generation
of printers. It is especially useful to all concerned when manufacturers learn of trends (what applications are popular and for what reasons). For
example, manufacturers need to know whether to continue designing software for Mac users, or concentrate software for PC users. So the survey